Being Political in the Right Way: On reasoning about society

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Being Political in the Right Way - by CasualPhysicsEnjoyer

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Being Political in the Right Way<br>On reasoning about society.<br>CasualPhysicsEnjoyer<br>May 18, 2026

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This image is not serious btw<br>From George Orwell’s ‘Why I Write’.<br>I cannot say with certainty which of my motives are the strongest, but I know which of them deserve to be followed. And looking back through my work, I see that it is invariably where I lacked political purpose that I wrote lifeless books and was betrayed into purple passages, sentences without meaning, decorative adjectives, and humbug generally.

I want to be political, but in the right way.<br>What does being political mean?<br>Being political means having a role in how one’s local society should be run. Local society refers to a few things: where you live, where you were born, or who you pay taxes to. I am Malaysian, a UK taxpayer, and live in South London. So I would consider South London, the UK and Malaysia as my local society.<br>Running something means deciding how resources should be allocated to common spaces. These are things like schools and roads. Resources are limited, so we need to make hard decisions to decide where they go. Being political means trying to convince others of what the optimal allocation is. Examples are include deciding how much taxation a society should have, where these funds are allocated, what sources of energy we should use, and what should be taught in schools.<br>The goal of this allocation game aims to increase things that aligns with the society’s values. For most of the world, this includes: the collective happiness of the society, the lifespan and population, the economic prosperity of the society, and preserving justness and freedoms.<br>Why be political?<br>So why am I suddenly interesting doing some writing that is political? After all, this is a science blog! Well, I used to feel icky about politics and politicians. But I’ve realised that I felt icky about partisanship , not necessarily the about the game of politics above. In fact, the more I’ve dug into housing, council management, and social sciences, the more I’ve realised that there are some interesting optimisation problems to dig into.<br>Also, the hard truth is that politics affects science. In Maker Of Patterns, Freeman Dyson not only talks about his emotional state during his divorce, but also about his political dispositions. In particular, the behaviours of scientists between 1940 and 1945 working on the Manhattan Project. And now we have Terence Tao campaigning for private funding since the NSF cut his grant.<br>And so I must have an active say in how political debate around science. This blog is my diary. I write to record my mental state, and so I must record my political thoughts. It benefits me in the end after all as a tax payer, to live in a society that is more prosperous and kind.<br>There are also other reasons to be more political, that involve defence against people outside of the local society. Because of cross border flows, there are people who are not in my local society that have an effect on how it is run. For example, division from social media and donations from foreign actors. I would like to counter these people with my own voice.<br>Also, I’ve been political all along.<br>My blog is about doing science independently. But this implies that the public establishment’s methods of doing science is bad. And so this is a political statement in itself. So I was political all along! I just need to do more.<br>So how can I be political in the right way?<br>The standard way to be political is that people pick a side, and try to defend it. In the UK, I can’t do this because I don’t have a clear idea of which side to support. Also, picking a side would endanger me to try to stick to that side, which could cause value drift. I wrote about this earlier in my Do Not Plan essay.<br>But if I don’t pick a side, how do I prevent my writing from being non-committal and vacuous? I want my writing to be strong, convicted, and engaging. I also want to contribute in a way that others can’t.<br>By elimination, there’s no point in me writing about the issues that are cursed. Cursed issues are the issues that have been debated for centuries, that everyone talks about, and that no one will listen to me for. Some of these problems include whether to increase or decrease tax, YIMBYism and immigration.<br>So instead, I need to focus on ideas which are less talked about, and solvable. There are a few reasons why important topics are not discussed even through they should be. But that doesn’t mean we should not talk about them. This is where I come in!<br>First, I could write about things we can mostly agree on in terms of the end result, but are complicated and have incentive issues. For example, we can all agree that pandemics are bad. And I think we would all agree to allocate more funding to biosecurity, like low cost air purification and PPE stockpile management. But the math, physics...

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