thinking about how there's a true solution to the trolley problem and union workers were the ones to point it out
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@scottmichaud they might get a bruise, but I'll take it!
Relatedly, in looking this image up again, I saw someone frame the trolley problem as "you are ON a trolley..." which is an impressive level of misunderstanding of both the problem and how switches work
@SnoopJ @scottmichaud that's how they did it on The Good Place lol, they were inside the trolley and the switch was too 🥴
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thinking about how there's a true solution to the trolley problem and union workers were the ones to point it out
@SnoopJ this happened as part of the sequence of events in one of Germany's deadliest train disasters
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@GrahamDowns @TerryHancock @SnoopJ
It's more about being able to make decisions effortlessly than quickly. The idea is to know what to do in a plausible but unfamiliar situation so we don't get overwhelmed by the moment. It's used for all kinds of training, not just ethical questions. It's why people like firefighters and soldiers train so much; they want to be able to respond correctly even when they're under enormous stress.@TerryHancock @SnoopJ @VATVSLPR yeah, I also thought about something like learning to use a firearm and preparing yourself for the possibility of having to point it at another human being and pull the trigger. All sorts of things like that. Preparing yourself for situations that you hope will never come up, and if you're lucky will never come up, but if they DO come up, you need to be able to react... Effortlessly, as you say.

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thinking about how there's a true solution to the trolley problem and union workers were the ones to point it out
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like, one might be tempted to say "noooo it's a constructed hypothetical that only admits these two options"
but there's something really lovely about a union coming in and being like "ah, no, a different world is possible"
@SnoopJ if life has told me anything, its that it is dangerous to not think further than 2 presented options
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@SnoopJ This is why I don’t like hypotheticals. I have too many questions and constantly look to other solutions.
And people reply “IT’S HYPOTHETICAL” like it’s some law of god.
@colorblindcowboy @SnoopJ I find that often when people respond like that, what actually happened is that they were trying to prove a point based on their own beliefs, were caught out by learning that there are actually other ways to look at things that they hadn't considered, and desperately try to re-scope the conversation to the options they had considered so that they can continue believing what they believe...
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thinking about how there's a true solution to the trolley problem and union workers were the ones to point it out
@SnoopJ@hachyderm.io the only problem with the Trolly Problem was the attempt at forcing only 2 solutions and keeping us in the box
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thinking about how there's a true solution to the trolley problem and union workers were the ones to point it out
@SnoopJ depending on how close the people are to the switch, wouldn't this possibly cause a multi track drifting situation, and then also a derailment -
@ZenHeathen @SnoopJ
original artist unknown, sorry. -
@colorblindcowboy @SnoopJ I find that often when people respond like that, what actually happened is that they were trying to prove a point based on their own beliefs, were caught out by learning that there are actually other ways to look at things that they hadn't considered, and desperately try to re-scope the conversation to the options they had considered so that they can continue believing what they believe...
@joepie91 I think you’re exactly right.
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@SnoopJ @ZenHeathen Yes. The spirit of the above image has always struck me as "don't settle for answers that the System suggests. There is ALWAYS a solution that respects human dignity"
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@ZenHeathen @SnoopJ right - that decision isn't a vacuum, there's infrastructure (a whole damn railway) built up before this moment.
maybe you face harsh consequences for slipping the switch, maybe you don't have a union and your risk tolerance that day with your kids means you can't - either way, if you see a trolley switch being built into someone else's /future/, do something about it before they're forced to make that choice.
get them the support to change the infrastructure around them

@risottobias @ZenHeathen @SnoopJ@hachyderm.io someone posted this on fedi a while ago, I don't remember who posted it, but this nails it.
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@ZenHeathen @SnoopJ
original artist unknown, sorry.@fishidwardrobe @ZenHeathen @SnoopJ In SLC, UT, where I lived for 6 years - I'm from SW Wyoming - the city has light rail. And when it's snaking through the city, it's very slow. A child on their knees goes faster. But to get to the southern suburbs, it goes down this corridor that follows I-15, and these trains just high-ball it down this corridor. But there is this one point with a street intersection, that we call "suicide point". Because there has been a lot of this kind of stuff there
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thinking about how there's a true solution to the trolley problem and union workers were the ones to point it out
@SnoopJ that's if there is a union to fight for safety measure. If management is left unchecked, they would gut the safety measure and such operation would derail the trolley, kill everyone on both line, the trolley inocupant and cause a fire burning three blocks and making 12 familly homeless. Management would get fined half what they saved by removing the safety feature then get twice that as a bonus for saving money.
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