If I decide not to Petrov-Ruin out of a desire to protect your belief that people can hold the power without abusing it, and I make that change because I care about you and your suffering as a fellow human and think your life will be much worse if my actions demolish that belief, then a successful Petrov Day is at risk of becoming another example of Goodhart’s Law.
TBC, I think you’re supposed to not Petrov-ruin so as to not be destructive (or to leverage your destructive power to modify habryka to be more like you’d like them to be). My interpretation of habryka is that it would be nice if (a) it were actually true that this community could wield destructive power without being destructive etc and (b) everybody knew that. The problem with wielding destructive power is that it makes (a) false, not just that it makes (b) false.
TBC, I think you’re supposed to not Petrov-ruin so as to not be destructive (or to leverage your destructive power to modify habryka to be more like you’d like them to be). My interpretation of habryka is that it would be nice if (a) it were actually true that this community could wield destructive power without being destructive etc and (b) everybody knew that. The problem with wielding destructive power is that it makes (a) false, not just that it makes (b) false.