There’s something strange about the analysis posted.
How is it that 100% of the general population with high (>96%) confidence got the correct answer, but only 66% of a subset of that population? Looking at the provided data, it looks like 3 out of 4 people (none with high Karma scores) who gave the highest confidence were right.
(Predictably, the remaining person with high confidence answered 500 million, which is almost the exact population of the European Union (or, in the popular parlance “Europe”). I almost made the same mistake, before realizing that a) “Europe” might be intended to include Russia, or part of Russia, plus other non-EU states and b) I don’t know the population of those countries, and can’t cover both bases. So in response, I kept the number and decreased my confidence value. Regrettably, 500 million can signify both tremendous confidence and very little confidence, which makes it hard to do an analysis of this effect.)
It’s worth pointing out that grey in the post refers to
I’m not sure what good grey rolls do in the context of this post (especially given the proviso that “there is a ‘Blue’ and a ‘Green’ position on almost every contemporary issue of political or cultural importance”).
But grey rolls are, of course, important: Grey facts and grey issues are uncorrupted by the Great War, and hence are that much more accessible/tractable. The more grey facts there are, the better rationalists we can be.
With respect to your comment, the presence of Grey, Yellow, Orange and Purple Teams would actually help things substantially—if I report facts from the six teams equally, it’s harder to label me as a partisan. (And it’s harder for any team to enforce partisanship.) Even if Blue-supporting facts truly are taboo (Green is unlikely to have more than one archnemesis), that’s much less limiting when only a sixth of facts are Blue. It’s a nice advantage of multipolar politics.