I think it’s more like “people who are currently struggling to lose weight, or get out of negative cycles of crippling anxiety about it, seeing it made light of is hurtful.” (I think one can hold a legitimate position that that’s a real problem they can’t just ‘snap out of’ or whatnot, and that watching the speech would be legitimately harmful to them, independent of whether you think it’s better on-net for society to cater to that)
My actual current position was something like “it was good to move it to the end as an ‘after-the-credits’ scene, and good to describe it as optional, but because everyone was still seated and in some cases it was really awkward to move around, it didn’t really feel like a live option, and it would have been better to do something like ‘let people start to leave slightly before starting the bit so that people who wanted to keep moving out had an easier time doing so’”
Maybe people who rationalized their failure to lose weight by “well, even Eliezer is overweight, it’s just metabolic disprivilege”
I think it’s more like “people who are currently struggling to lose weight, or get out of negative cycles of crippling anxiety about it, seeing it made light of is hurtful.” (I think one can hold a legitimate position that that’s a real problem they can’t just ‘snap out of’ or whatnot, and that watching the speech would be legitimately harmful to them, independent of whether you think it’s better on-net for society to cater to that)
My actual current position was something like “it was good to move it to the end as an ‘after-the-credits’ scene, and good to describe it as optional, but because everyone was still seated and in some cases it was really awkward to move around, it didn’t really feel like a live option, and it would have been better to do something like ‘let people start to leave slightly before starting the bit so that people who wanted to keep moving out had an easier time doing so’”