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Perspective Shift

You read this story from where you sit.
Want to read it from somewhere else?

We'll re-present the same story as a thoughtful proponent of the failure-of-imagination frame would. Not to convince you. To let you actually meet the argument.

Choose a vantage
Retold from the other vantage
Steelman · slot A
The dismal-theorem case
A risk analyst trained in tail-event modeling would argue —
We talked ourselves out of preparing for this. In 2007 and again in 2022, serious people sat in rooms and decided a full Hormuz closure was too implausible or too catastrophic to bother modeling — and the second reason should have been the tell. When a scenario is so large that no single institution can respond to it, that is precisely the scenario you must war-game, because nobody else will. Weitzman's dismal theorem warned us that low-probability, unbounded-loss events break conventional cost-benefit analysis. We let that math intimidate us into silence instead of into preparation, and now two months into an actual closure we are improvising a response we had decades to design.

If this read like a fair rendering of the argument — even when you disagree — it's doing its job. Steelmen aren't aimed at persuading you; they're aimed at what the other side actually believes when they're thinking clearly.