You said your anthropics arguments aren't that important, which brings up this question: If SIA is true and provides evidence for god's existence (per your position), what does god do about humans who don't believe in him? Is there punishment involved? Or reward if you DO believe in him?
What would a campaign to get that - I assume some congressional law saying "we hereby allocate X dollars to the Giving Foreign Aid department to fund [Super Effective Charity Y] - accomplished look like?
You said your anthropics arguments aren't that important, which brings up this question: If SIA is true and provides evidence for god's existence (per your position), what does god do about humans who don't believe in him? Is there punishment involved? Or reward if you DO believe in him?
what would be the single, most effective, compact, human-related policy change that you'd advocate for?
Hmm, not sure. I'd support majorly expanding the foreign aid budget to effective charities.
What would a campaign to get that - I assume some congressional law saying "we hereby allocate X dollars to the Giving Foreign Aid department to fund [Super Effective Charity Y] - accomplished look like?