Thanks for your comment! I agree with both of your hesitations and I think I will make the relevant changes to the post: instead of ‘totally unenforceable,’ I’ll say ‘seems quite challenging to enforce.’ I believe that this is true (and I hope that the broad takeaway from this post is basically the opposite of ‘researchers need to stay out of the policy game,’ so I’m not too concerned that I’d be incentivizing the wrong behavior).
To your point, ‘logistically and politically inconceivable’ is probably similarly overblown. I will change it to ‘highly logistically and politically fraught.’ You’re right that the general failure of these policies shouldn’t be equated with their inconceivability. (I am fairly confident that, if we were so inclined, we could go download a free copy of any movie or song we could dream of—I wouldn’t consider this a case study of policy success—only of policy conceivability!).
Thanks for your comment! I agree with both of your hesitations and I think I will make the relevant changes to the post: instead of ‘totally unenforceable,’ I’ll say ‘seems quite challenging to enforce.’ I believe that this is true (and I hope that the broad takeaway from this post is basically the opposite of ‘researchers need to stay out of the policy game,’ so I’m not too concerned that I’d be incentivizing the wrong behavior).
To your point, ‘logistically and politically inconceivable’ is probably similarly overblown. I will change it to ‘highly logistically and politically fraught.’ You’re right that the general failure of these policies shouldn’t be equated with their inconceivability. (I am fairly confident that, if we were so inclined, we could go download a free copy of any movie or song we could dream of—I wouldn’t consider this a case study of policy success—only of policy conceivability!).