Poorly governed states in social and economic turmoil create environments conducive to global terrorism and the black markets that provide weapons capable of serious destruction (which right now means nukes and chemical but in the future could mean nanotech or genetically engineered pathogens). A misgoverned sub-Saharan Africa is also the most like origin point for a naturally occurring pathogen because of the diseases they already have that could mutate to spread faster, the sanitation situation and the fact that few African governments are competent enough to pull off a quarantine.
The absence of rule of law, democratic checks on the military, continual conflict and overall incompetence also increases the chances lab error or misuse of high tech weaponry as technology become more accessible while social, economic and political conditions do not improve.
In general, areas of chaos become more and more dangerous to surrounding regions as technology improves.
The absence of rule of law, democratic checks on the military, continual conflict and overall incompetence also increases the chances lab error or misuse of high tech weaponry as technology become more accessible while social, economic and political conditions do not improve.
I just had a fun idea: take this premise, and the demonstrated difficulty of improving Africa, and the idea that the development vs. likeliness-to-screw-everybody-over-with-WMDs curve would be an inverted U, and calculate the point at which it would be better to cut off all aid & begin bombing Africa into (or within) the Stone Age.
The version of this that I would put forward seriously is that the Westphalian concept of inviolable national sovereignty is a convenience to the rich and complacent inhabitants of successful nations, but a huge detriment to the inhabitants of failed states, condemning them to endless slavery at the hands of incompetent dictators who need fear no invasion as they weaken and starve their captive countries. Africa might benefit enormously from being conquered by almost anyone, including China.
Probably the best thing that could be done for the poor of the world would be to greatly relax or eliminate immigration restrictions in developed nations. Of course that would be a little too much caring for the vast majority of citizens in the developed world. Far easier to salve your conscience with the occasional donation to charity than to actually have to live near these poor people!
True, but only up to a point. If you were to move everyone into a developed country ASAP, the “memetic overload” can destroy the very institutions that make those countries successful.
Yes, I know this sounds suspicously simliar to something a lot of racists say, but it’s still true: if you add 100 random mouthbreathers to a five-man successful Silicon Valley startup, you don’t get a 2000% improvement in productivity and a 5-fold gain in wages for the newcomers. Rather, you destroy the operation.
Greatly relaxing or eliminating immigration restrictions wouldn’t result in everyone moving from the developing world overnight. One of the main benefits of immigration in reducing poverty comes in the form of remittances back to family in the home country.
I wasn’t claiming to be original but I wouldn’t credit Robin Hanson as the primary influence on me on this issue. Maybe Kerry Howley or Will Wilkinson should have got the credit.
Looks like you are assuming that the west—England, France, Spain etc conquered other countries to improve those countries. In reality, the primary motivation was to get economic leverage against the competing powers at the time. And often times, this is done at the expense of the economic well-being of the people of the conquered countries. For example, the British Raj destroyed the budding local textile industry and trade between India and other European countries, Persia and Turkey.
If not, what makes you think it would be any different with Africa?
Looks like you are assuming that the west—England, France, Spain etc conquered other countries to improve those countries. In reality, the primary motivation was to get economic leverage against the competing powers at the time.
No one is assuming that. Everyone here assumes that the conquerors would be motivated by self-interest. The argument some are making is that the conquering would still have the side effect of making life better for the conquered.
I’d have to turn this over to Michael Vassar if you want details. He’s the one who convinced me that the British used to be really good at this.
One key point is that it doesn’t do you much good to be conquered by conquerors who are too squeamish to keep order. Remember when the Iraqis were wishing for Saddam back because he might have been utterly evil but at least his reign of terror kept peace in the streets? That’s why I mentioned China. The old-time British would’ve been better, but you can bet China wouldn’t tolerate warfare in cities they planned to go on milking. Life in China isn’t perfect but it’s a whole lot better than living in a failed state.
I seriously think that Earth would be better off if we got out of the way and let China conquer everything that isn’t a democracy.
Well I think the British were really good at that but they were good at it during a time when the areas they were taking over didn’t have expectations or traditions of sovereign statehood. Nor was there a vocal international community with the same expectations. We’re all Westphalians now. You just can’t get away with taking over territory anymore.
That could theoretically change in the future, but in a world anything like this one China invades Africa and deals with a popular and violent resistance movement that only grows.
I think you underestimate the effectiveness of authoritarian methods of pacification. There is an enormous difference between the methods the Coalition forces are using in Iraq today, and large scale use of concentration camps, hostage taking for actions against occupying forces and all those other good things. Imagine what Eastern Europe would have looked like during WW2, if German resources weren´t committed fighting the Soviets. Another good analogy is to look at is how things are in Tibet.
If you don’t have ethical qualms there are certainly more effective ways to combat resistances but even the Nazis had a lot of trouble quelling resistance in places with strong national identities (France, mainly but Britain would have been hell to hold on to).
All of this is a lot easier if you’re already at war with most of the world—if you also want to maintain good relations with the developed world there are some pretty firm limits on what you can do. What do you think the reaction of Europe and the Muslim world would have been to the US deciding to annex Iraq and abandon ethical restrictions on their counter insurgency tactics?
It was my belief that the counterfactual was that the rest of world agreed to stand by and allow China to take over all of the non-democratic world. The US would have faced a lot of flack if it decided to annex Iraq, yes. However, the only people who could effectively fight us in a non-Westphalian world are Russia and China. The entire Muslim world could be conquered (in the sense that got George Bush to say “Mission Accomplished”) in less than 2 years. The US, however, would not embrace the tactics necessary to pacify that territory, nor would we be able to raise the number of troops necessary to control the territory. China, on the other hand, has a 2.25 million strong army and the ability to impress far more and to engage in the sorts of tactics that allow actual pacification.
I’m not sure we hold different views then. A world where no one objects to China taking over the non-Democratic world is a very different world from the one that we live in. Nonetheless, in that world it would be a decent idea.
I seriously think that Earth would be better off if we got out of the way and let China conquer everything that isn’t a democracy.
What exactly are you planning to do once they control all the former non-democratic states, consolidated their territory and a ready to get on with business?
What exactly are you implying China would do then? No matter how much of the world they controlled, they still couldn’t invade the US or any other nuclear power.
Conquer any of the stable countries that didn’t have nukes and was below the threshold at which the other nuclear powers choose to scorch the earth. (Although the US should probably then trade nukes with said countries to prevent that.)
Claim the sea, preventing any shipping trade. Again, to the threshold of thermonuclear war.
Claim space. Destroy all non Chinese satellites.
Maintain a standing army that could defeat the rest of the world in conventional warfare without breaking a sweat. Just because they can.
Develop AGI. Ok yes, they could do that anyway. So all the other stuff is irrelevant.
How do you feel about Russia doing the conquering? They’ve still got the guts to use brutal methods when necessary; they were still willing to go all Stalin on Chechnya even after they were no longer Communist.
Russian person here and I don’t want to conquer anyone! Don’t get me wrong, it’s kind of neat to hear you and Vassar agreeing with Moldbug about colonialism, but seriously: I don’t see how annexing Tajikistan would help our economy. They’re already sending us all the cheap labor we want :-) This arrangement is better than back when we owned Tajikistan and a host of other now-independent countries, which were all huge money sinks.
(IMO economically it would even make sense for us to let Chechnya go, but we can’t do that because they’d just start the attacks again with money and volunteers flowing in from Arab countries, as it happened in the first two wars.)
Yeah, conquering foreign countries isn’t very good at generating wealth for the conquerors these days. You used to be able to go take an army into a city, round up all the valuables, and sell the population into slavery. Not so much any more.
Russia had a head start—and has oil wealth. For comparison, Saudi Arabia’s GDP per capita is on the order of $17,000. 45% of its entire GDP is its nationalized oil industry; private industry is only 40%.
It’s true. However I think people get a little caught up in the China is growing story. Russia is a dying country in a lot of ways. However, both are heavily controlled by corrupt leaders.
That is not clearly relevant, since the graph was not about Russia being richer, but growing faster. That the USSR numbers were higher might be relevant, if it makes it easier to return to them.
has oil wealth
Russia has a similar amount of oil exports to Saudi Arabia, spread over five times the population, but has similar GDP per capita. Simply going from 0 to its current oil doesn’t account for the change over the past decade. If you throw in gas, aluminum and steel, it might be a big piece of the change, though.
If we were serious about it, then I think so. And by “serious”, I mean “willing to massacre populations that didn’t fall into line.” We’d have a higher body count, but things would be better after about a generation and a half.
I think this is voted down unfairly. I read this not as a genuine plea to nuke Africa, but as a Robin Hanson-esque caution against motivated thinking. We’d like aid to Africa to be the Right Thing, and if we’re made uncomfortable by the idea that existential risk trumps that, why, here’s a good reason why aid to Africa is justified on existential risk grounds! So this is a sort of antidote: if that were your real reason, you’d greet gwern’s alternative solution with a great deal more equanimity than you do.
EDIT: I’m obviously super-persuasive, since it’s gone from downvoted to upvoted since my comment :-)
The Global economy would tailspin and the existential risk situation would get a lot worse as a result.
I think you badly overestimate how important Africa is. Even assuming resources cannot be extracted while also bombing the place, Africa isn’t that important.
Now, if Africa disappeared or was suddenly destroyed, I would expect the global financial markets to drop considerably; but they are so skittish they drop at the fall of a hat. The long-term economic impact wouldn’t be so bad outside of commodities like Coltan. Certainly not so bad as some grey goo getting loose.
(I’d count things like AIDS as further debits to Africa, but obviously that’s a sunk cost as far as this suggestion is concerned.)
I’m willing to continue participating in this discussion but it is pretty difficult without you specifying more exactly what the proposal is. To begin with, where exactly are you bombing? Are Egypt and Morocco included? South Africa? Are you paving the continent with H-Bombs or targeting infrastructure with conventional weapons? What kind of population is left after the attack? What kind of industries will be left behind? Will there be restrictions against doing business on the continent to keep them from redeveloping? Will refugees be allowed to emigrate?
Some considerations: if you attack majority Muslim countries you’re instantly creating billions of terrorists, especially if you target Egypt and leave it open to Israeli expansion. If you use nukes there are huge environmental implications for the Middle East, India and if you leave it, Northern Africa. The fallout would be bad enough that these countries may well declare war. Meanwhile, the use of nuclear weapons would be seriously objected to by large majorities in the Western world and would radicalize large segments of the West particularly since, at least in the US, the attack would be seen as having racist motivations- in the eyes of a lot of people this would basically be genocide. Even with minimum possible radicalization you’re still going to have to do something with all the African immigrants and children of African immigrants (include, you know, a former President of the United States). Also, China is going to be pissed at what you did to their future satellite states. Whoever does the bombing probably gets trade sanctions placed on them by the rest of the world.
Using conventional weapons and doing less damage probably decreases the chances of broader international conflict in the short term and lessens radicalization in the West. But bombing economies back to the stone age doesn’t make the people who live there cavemen. You’ve still got a huge population furious at the West with nothing to lose- and those people can set bombs off about as well as anyone else. Meanwhile, you’ve created a power vacuum in one of the most resource rich areas on Earth which is fine until Great powers start competing over it. You start the colonization process all over again, this time with weapons that can destroy the world. Plus a buttload of resources sunk into the resulting conflict and rebuilding Africa’s infrastructure so those resources can be extracted. Of course, this isn’t something Africans are likely to forget so as soon as the continent is redeveloped you’re dealing with terrorism again. I suppose you can prohibit doing business on the continent but then you’ve just created a black market again...
Not to mention, in general, you’re just shaking up the status quo which means some countries will see this as an opportunity to increase their share of international power while status quo powers won’t realize they no longer hold all the cards—its these kind of knowledge asymmetries that lead to international conflicts historically. From an abstract perspective you’re just seriously destabilizing the system and rarely does anything good come from that.
I bet that Gwern simply flinched from modeling any of this, sensing that, with that level of absurdity exposed, such an intellectual provocation would simply lose the “intellectual” part in LW’s eyes.
There a high moral cost to beginning bombing Africa. It would create opposition in the Western world that would likely increase the chance of homegrown terrorism.
There a high moral cost to beginning bombing Africa.
There is no moral cost by definition; at the point at which we would want to start bombing, the immoral thing is to not bomb. We’ve bombed many countries for far less than existential threats (arguably, every US bombing campaign back to WWII).
Further, I think you drastically overestimate the chances of homegrown terrorism. Vietnam was long ago. Reports like millions of Iraqi refugees or hundreds of thousands of excess Iraqi deaths merely spark muted partisan arguments about whether the Lancet’s statistics are right or not. It’s a long way to Tipperary.
The UK had homegrown terrorism that it probably wouldn’t have had without the Iraq and Afghanistan war.
Additionally mosts of the deaths in Iraq are in the West considered to be collateral damage. The Western reaction would be different when we would believe that the death toll is intentional and is supposed to bomb Iraq into the stone age.
What makes you think this scenario either is caused by or causes WWIII?
A lot of scenarios in which your blood is shed involve you being murdered; but also a lot of other such scenarios involve a cancer being removed and saving your life.
Poorly governed states in social and economic turmoil create environments conducive to global terrorism and the black markets that provide weapons capable of serious destruction (which right now means nukes and chemical but in the future could mean nanotech or genetically engineered pathogens). A misgoverned sub-Saharan Africa is also the most like origin point for a naturally occurring pathogen because of the diseases they already have that could mutate to spread faster, the sanitation situation and the fact that few African governments are competent enough to pull off a quarantine.
The absence of rule of law, democratic checks on the military, continual conflict and overall incompetence also increases the chances lab error or misuse of high tech weaponry as technology become more accessible while social, economic and political conditions do not improve.
In general, areas of chaos become more and more dangerous to surrounding regions as technology improves.
I just had a fun idea: take this premise, and the demonstrated difficulty of improving Africa, and the idea that the development vs. likeliness-to-screw-everybody-over-with-WMDs curve would be an inverted U, and calculate the point at which it would be better to cut off all aid & begin bombing Africa into (or within) the Stone Age.
The version of this that I would put forward seriously is that the Westphalian concept of inviolable national sovereignty is a convenience to the rich and complacent inhabitants of successful nations, but a huge detriment to the inhabitants of failed states, condemning them to endless slavery at the hands of incompetent dictators who need fear no invasion as they weaken and starve their captive countries. Africa might benefit enormously from being conquered by almost anyone, including China.
Probably the best thing that could be done for the poor of the world would be to greatly relax or eliminate immigration restrictions in developed nations. Of course that would be a little too much caring for the vast majority of citizens in the developed world. Far easier to salve your conscience with the occasional donation to charity than to actually have to live near these poor people!
True, but only up to a point. If you were to move everyone into a developed country ASAP, the “memetic overload” can destroy the very institutions that make those countries successful.
Yes, I know this sounds suspicously simliar to something a lot of racists say, but it’s still true: if you add 100 random mouthbreathers to a five-man successful Silicon Valley startup, you don’t get a 2000% improvement in productivity and a 5-fold gain in wages for the newcomers. Rather, you destroy the operation.
Greatly relaxing or eliminating immigration restrictions wouldn’t result in everyone moving from the developing world overnight. One of the main benefits of immigration in reducing poverty comes in the form of remittances back to family in the home country.
Now now; if you’re going to be in Hanson mode, at least credit him when you’re not being original: http://www.overcomingbias.com/2009/12/microlending-fails.html
I’m not sure that Hanson was being original. Libertarian leaning economists have been making this argument for some time.
I wasn’t claiming to be original but I wouldn’t credit Robin Hanson as the primary influence on me on this issue. Maybe Kerry Howley or Will Wilkinson should have got the credit.
Is it too dangerous to the heat/light level of the discussion to ask what Iraq tells us about how that would go?
I said conquered, not trashed by a bunch of Westphalians who weren’t planning on owning the place afterward.
Looks like you are assuming that the west—England, France, Spain etc conquered other countries to improve those countries. In reality, the primary motivation was to get economic leverage against the competing powers at the time. And often times, this is done at the expense of the economic well-being of the people of the conquered countries. For example, the British Raj destroyed the budding local textile industry and trade between India and other European countries, Persia and Turkey.
If not, what makes you think it would be any different with Africa?
No one is assuming that. Everyone here assumes that the conquerors would be motivated by self-interest. The argument some are making is that the conquering would still have the side effect of making life better for the conquered.
Wait, you think Iraq would have gone better if we had just ruled it with a military governor and then tried to annex it?!
I’d have to turn this over to Michael Vassar if you want details. He’s the one who convinced me that the British used to be really good at this.
One key point is that it doesn’t do you much good to be conquered by conquerors who are too squeamish to keep order. Remember when the Iraqis were wishing for Saddam back because he might have been utterly evil but at least his reign of terror kept peace in the streets? That’s why I mentioned China. The old-time British would’ve been better, but you can bet China wouldn’t tolerate warfare in cities they planned to go on milking. Life in China isn’t perfect but it’s a whole lot better than living in a failed state.
I seriously think that Earth would be better off if we got out of the way and let China conquer everything that isn’t a democracy.
Well I think the British were really good at that but they were good at it during a time when the areas they were taking over didn’t have expectations or traditions of sovereign statehood. Nor was there a vocal international community with the same expectations. We’re all Westphalians now. You just can’t get away with taking over territory anymore.
That could theoretically change in the future, but in a world anything like this one China invades Africa and deals with a popular and violent resistance movement that only grows.
I think you underestimate the effectiveness of authoritarian methods of pacification. There is an enormous difference between the methods the Coalition forces are using in Iraq today, and large scale use of concentration camps, hostage taking for actions against occupying forces and all those other good things. Imagine what Eastern Europe would have looked like during WW2, if German resources weren´t committed fighting the Soviets. Another good analogy is to look at is how things are in Tibet.
If you don’t have ethical qualms there are certainly more effective ways to combat resistances but even the Nazis had a lot of trouble quelling resistance in places with strong national identities (France, mainly but Britain would have been hell to hold on to).
All of this is a lot easier if you’re already at war with most of the world—if you also want to maintain good relations with the developed world there are some pretty firm limits on what you can do. What do you think the reaction of Europe and the Muslim world would have been to the US deciding to annex Iraq and abandon ethical restrictions on their counter insurgency tactics?
It was my belief that the counterfactual was that the rest of world agreed to stand by and allow China to take over all of the non-democratic world. The US would have faced a lot of flack if it decided to annex Iraq, yes. However, the only people who could effectively fight us in a non-Westphalian world are Russia and China. The entire Muslim world could be conquered (in the sense that got George Bush to say “Mission Accomplished”) in less than 2 years. The US, however, would not embrace the tactics necessary to pacify that territory, nor would we be able to raise the number of troops necessary to control the territory. China, on the other hand, has a 2.25 million strong army and the ability to impress far more and to engage in the sorts of tactics that allow actual pacification.
I’m not sure we hold different views then. A world where no one objects to China taking over the non-Democratic world is a very different world from the one that we live in. Nonetheless, in that world it would be a decent idea.
What exactly are you planning to do once they control all the former non-democratic states, consolidated their territory and a ready to get on with business?
What exactly are you implying China would do then? No matter how much of the world they controlled, they still couldn’t invade the US or any other nuclear power.
Off the top of my head, they could:
Conquer any of the stable countries that didn’t have nukes and was below the threshold at which the other nuclear powers choose to scorch the earth. (Although the US should probably then trade nukes with said countries to prevent that.)
Claim the sea, preventing any shipping trade. Again, to the threshold of thermonuclear war.
Claim space. Destroy all non Chinese satellites.
Maintain a standing army that could defeat the rest of the world in conventional warfare without breaking a sweat. Just because they can.
Develop AGI. Ok yes, they could do that anyway. So all the other stuff is irrelevant.
How do you feel about Russia doing the conquering? They’ve still got the guts to use brutal methods when necessary; they were still willing to go all Stalin on Chechnya even after they were no longer Communist.
Russia seems grossly incompetent compared to China. I don’t know if the conquerees would be better off.
Russian person here and I don’t want to conquer anyone! Don’t get me wrong, it’s kind of neat to hear you and Vassar agreeing with Moldbug about colonialism, but seriously: I don’t see how annexing Tajikistan would help our economy. They’re already sending us all the cheap labor we want :-) This arrangement is better than back when we owned Tajikistan and a host of other now-independent countries, which were all huge money sinks.
(IMO economically it would even make sense for us to let Chechnya go, but we can’t do that because they’d just start the attacks again with money and volunteers flowing in from Arab countries, as it happened in the first two wars.)
Yeah, conquering foreign countries isn’t very good at generating wealth for the conquerors these days. You used to be able to go take an army into a city, round up all the valuables, and sell the population into slavery. Not so much any more.
This is really strange then:
http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=per+capita+gdp+of+russia%2Fper+capita+gdp+of+china
Russia had a head start—and has oil wealth. For comparison, Saudi Arabia’s GDP per capita is on the order of $17,000. 45% of its entire GDP is its nationalized oil industry; private industry is only 40%.
It’s true. However I think people get a little caught up in the China is growing story. Russia is a dying country in a lot of ways. However, both are heavily controlled by corrupt leaders.
EDIT:was->ways
That is not clearly relevant, since the graph was not about Russia being richer, but growing faster. That the USSR numbers were higher might be relevant, if it makes it easier to return to them.
Russia has a similar amount of oil exports to Saudi Arabia, spread over five times the population, but has similar GDP per capita. Simply going from 0 to its current oil doesn’t account for the change over the past decade. If you throw in gas, aluminum and steel, it might be a big piece of the change, though.
Oops, I only noticed the number, not the graph.
Michael Vassar, could you give the details on this?
If we were serious about it, then I think so. And by “serious”, I mean “willing to massacre populations that didn’t fall into line.” We’d have a higher body count, but things would be better after about a generation and a half.
See also: Philippine-American War
Also, in hindsight, the U.S. probably shouldn’t have interfered with the Soviet Union’s misadventure in Afghanistan.
Also in hindsight, the US should not have turned Haiti back over to the Haitians. Losing the corvee and getting Duvalier is, I think, a bad trade.
I think this is voted down unfairly. I read this not as a genuine plea to nuke Africa, but as a Robin Hanson-esque caution against motivated thinking. We’d like aid to Africa to be the Right Thing, and if we’re made uncomfortable by the idea that existential risk trumps that, why, here’s a good reason why aid to Africa is justified on existential risk grounds! So this is a sort of antidote: if that were your real reason, you’d greet gwern’s alternative solution with a great deal more equanimity than you do.
EDIT: I’m obviously super-persuasive, since it’s gone from downvoted to upvoted since my comment :-)
Oh, of course not. At least, not until I’ve crunched some numbers.
Quite right. It’s fun to use logical arguments to wind up in a uncomfortable place.
Obviously, if you get the same number of up-votes as the original paradox/comment! ;_;
The Global economy would tailspin and the existential risk situation would get a lot worse as a result.
Also, this would probably be a place where I’d depart from utilitarianism, even if it would work.
Clever, if horrific, idea though.
I think you badly overestimate how important Africa is. Even assuming resources cannot be extracted while also bombing the place, Africa isn’t that important.
The continental GDP is just 2.7 trillion. Several percent of that is foreign aid (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economy_of_Africa) and their exports to the rest of the world are small enough that their balance of payments (with the rest of the world) is negative by billions (http://www.africaneconomicoutlook.org/en/data-statistics/).
Now, if Africa disappeared or was suddenly destroyed, I would expect the global financial markets to drop considerably; but they are so skittish they drop at the fall of a hat. The long-term economic impact wouldn’t be so bad outside of commodities like Coltan. Certainly not so bad as some grey goo getting loose.
(I’d count things like AIDS as further debits to Africa, but obviously that’s a sunk cost as far as this suggestion is concerned.)
I’m willing to continue participating in this discussion but it is pretty difficult without you specifying more exactly what the proposal is. To begin with, where exactly are you bombing? Are Egypt and Morocco included? South Africa? Are you paving the continent with H-Bombs or targeting infrastructure with conventional weapons? What kind of population is left after the attack? What kind of industries will be left behind? Will there be restrictions against doing business on the continent to keep them from redeveloping? Will refugees be allowed to emigrate?
Some considerations: if you attack majority Muslim countries you’re instantly creating billions of terrorists, especially if you target Egypt and leave it open to Israeli expansion. If you use nukes there are huge environmental implications for the Middle East, India and if you leave it, Northern Africa. The fallout would be bad enough that these countries may well declare war. Meanwhile, the use of nuclear weapons would be seriously objected to by large majorities in the Western world and would radicalize large segments of the West particularly since, at least in the US, the attack would be seen as having racist motivations- in the eyes of a lot of people this would basically be genocide. Even with minimum possible radicalization you’re still going to have to do something with all the African immigrants and children of African immigrants (include, you know, a former President of the United States). Also, China is going to be pissed at what you did to their future satellite states. Whoever does the bombing probably gets trade sanctions placed on them by the rest of the world.
Using conventional weapons and doing less damage probably decreases the chances of broader international conflict in the short term and lessens radicalization in the West. But bombing economies back to the stone age doesn’t make the people who live there cavemen. You’ve still got a huge population furious at the West with nothing to lose- and those people can set bombs off about as well as anyone else. Meanwhile, you’ve created a power vacuum in one of the most resource rich areas on Earth which is fine until Great powers start competing over it. You start the colonization process all over again, this time with weapons that can destroy the world. Plus a buttload of resources sunk into the resulting conflict and rebuilding Africa’s infrastructure so those resources can be extracted. Of course, this isn’t something Africans are likely to forget so as soon as the continent is redeveloped you’re dealing with terrorism again. I suppose you can prohibit doing business on the continent but then you’ve just created a black market again...
Not to mention, in general, you’re just shaking up the status quo which means some countries will see this as an opportunity to increase their share of international power while status quo powers won’t realize they no longer hold all the cards—its these kind of knowledge asymmetries that lead to international conflicts historically. From an abstract perspective you’re just seriously destabilizing the system and rarely does anything good come from that.
I bet that Gwern simply flinched from modeling any of this, sensing that, with that level of absurdity exposed, such an intellectual provocation would simply lose the “intellectual” part in LW’s eyes.
There a high moral cost to beginning bombing Africa. It would create opposition in the Western world that would likely increase the chance of homegrown terrorism.
There is no moral cost by definition; at the point at which we would want to start bombing, the immoral thing is to not bomb. We’ve bombed many countries for far less than existential threats (arguably, every US bombing campaign back to WWII).
Further, I think you drastically overestimate the chances of homegrown terrorism. Vietnam was long ago. Reports like millions of Iraqi refugees or hundreds of thousands of excess Iraqi deaths merely spark muted partisan arguments about whether the Lancet’s statistics are right or not. It’s a long way to Tipperary.
The UK had homegrown terrorism that it probably wouldn’t have had without the Iraq and Afghanistan war.
Additionally mosts of the deaths in Iraq are in the West considered to be collateral damage. The Western reaction would be different when we would believe that the death toll is intentional and is supposed to bomb Iraq into the stone age.
Normally I like fun ideas, but a lot of scenarios where Africa is bombed to the Stone Age (to prevent terrorism!!!) involve World War III.
What makes you think this scenario either is caused by or causes WWIII?
A lot of scenarios in which your blood is shed involve you being murdered; but also a lot of other such scenarios involve a cancer being removed and saving your life.
As wake-up calls on motivated cognition go, that one is worthy of Robin Hanson. Thanks.
(Not that he’d put it quite that way)