The inveresly proportional thing is a bad move. Sorting through potential charitable causes is itself charitable work and it’s just crazy inefficient to do that by everyone voting on what tugs at their heartstrings but by paying someone smart to consider all the various pet causes and evaluate them. Worse, the causes that are least well known are often unknown for very good reason but will now get special attention.
The reason you are right about cases like the doctor example is that when you are actually in a location that then gets hit you *are* leveraging your superior knowledge of how to get things done there or even just understanding what’s happened. Thought, truthfully, the real reason it makes sense is the easier psychological motivation.
The inveresly proportional thing is a bad move. Sorting through potential charitable causes is itself charitable work and it’s just crazy inefficient to do that by everyone voting on what tugs at their heartstrings but by paying someone smart to consider all the various pet causes and evaluate them. Worse, the causes that are least well known are often unknown for very good reason but will now get special attention.
The reason you are right about cases like the doctor example is that when you are actually in a location that then gets hit you *are* leveraging your superior knowledge of how to get things done there or even just understanding what’s happened. Thought, truthfully, the real reason it makes sense is the easier psychological motivation.