Malicious Streetlight Effects Vs. "Directional Correctness" - A Semi-Non-Apology
whatshot 6 snips
Mar 14, 2026
A dive into the “malicious streetlight” effect where facts about one thing are used to dismiss a related complaint. A look at a 2016 immigration data mix-up that masked shifts in migrant origin. A critique of “directional correctness,” the habit of exaggerating claims slightly beyond what evidence supports. A discussion about balancing correction of falsehoods with respect for people’s lived experiences.
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Malicious Streetlight Effects Explained
Malicious streetlight effects use correct facts about a slightly different target to claim the original complaint is debunked.
Scott Alexander illustrates this with media proving Mexican illegal crossings were low while total southern-border crossings rose due to Central Americans.
insights INSIGHT
The Problem Of Directional Correctness
Directional correctness is the opposite trick: exaggerating a claim slightly beyond the truth and defending it as 'directionally correct.'
Examples include calling assault murder or claiming a 5% rat survival increase 'cures cancer,' which misleads debate.
question_answer ANECDOTE
Responding To Extreme Crime Claims
Scott describes his posts on crime responding to recurring false claims about rising crime and cooked police stats.
He cites a neoreactionary blog claiming murder rates rose 40–45x and a counterclaim that medical advances mask murder increases.
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Malicious streetlights are an evil trick from Dark Data Journalism. Some annoying enemy has a valid complaint. So you use FACTS and LOGIC to prove that something similar-sounding-but-slightly-different is definitely false. Then you act like you've debunked the complaint.
My "favorite" example, spotted during the 2016 election, was a response to some #BuildTheWall types saying that illegal immigration through the southern border was near record highs. Some data journalist got good statistics and proved that the number of Mexicans illegally entering the country was actually quite low. When I looked into it further, I found that this was true - illegal immigration had shifted from Mexicans to Hondurans/Guatemalans/Salvadoreans etc entering through Mexico. If you counted those, illegal immigration through the southern border was near record highs.
But the inverse evil trick is saying something "directionally correct", ie slightly stronger than the truth can support. If your enemy committed assault, say he committed murder. If he committed sexual harassment, say he committed rape. If your drug increases cancer survival by 5% in rats, say that it "cures cancer". Then, if someone calls you on it, accuse them of "literally well ackshually-ing" you, because you were "directionally correct" and it's offensive to the victims to try to defend assault-committed sexual harassers. This is the sort of pathetic defense I called out in If It's Worth Your Time To Lie, It's Worth My Time To Correct It.
But trying to call out one of these failure modes looks like falling into the other. I ran into this on my series of posts on crime last week. I wrote these because I regularly saw people make the arguments I tried to debunk.