Q asked questions and gave a lot of hints of things, but never provided absolute proof to the type of people who want things documented, and approved by a mainstream source.
It won't work that way because it can't work that way.
So, you might need to approach it differently.
I have started using this, which helps people understand that they need to consider new ideas:
There was a time when "everyone" in the world thought that the Sun revolved around the Earth. They were so convinced, that when Galileo came along and proved why that could not be true, not only did they hate him, but they put him in prison and he died under house arrest. And yet, he was the one who was right all along, and everybody else was wrong.
Do you think it is possible that almost everyone could be wrong about some things that they are currently convinced of? (He should say yes, if he has any brain cells).
Do you know WHY people have such a strong, negative reaction to ideas that are counter to what they think is true?
It is a psychological phenomenon known as "cognitive dissonance." We have a strong tendancy to ignore or reject things that are opposite of what we already believe to be true.
For most things you think you know, you learned it as a child, from your parents, teachers, the media, schools, and everyone else you know also believed it. But what if all those people were wrong -- just like when people belived the Sun revolved around the Earth? Then, you would reject evidence that you were presented with, not because you really KNOW, but because you have learned to believe something, that might not actually be true.
That lays the foundation. From there, find something that he believes is true (not necessarily about Covid or Q), and then show him that it is not true. He only believes it because he was taught (propagandized) to believe it.
JFK is a good example: Warren Commission story is pushed by the media and schools, but House Select Committee on Assassinations overruled it, and showed that JFK was killed by AT LEAST TWO GUNMEN. So, why does the media push a known lie?
This is some great advice. The way to redpill someone is to get them to ask questions about the world around them, and more importantly, get them to understand asking questions doesn't make them wrong or a bad person.
Q asked questions and gave a lot of hints of things, but never provided absolute proof to the type of people who want things documented, and approved by a mainstream source.
It won't work that way because it can't work that way.
So, you might need to approach it differently.
I have started using this, which helps people understand that they need to consider new ideas:
That lays the foundation. From there, find something that he believes is true (not necessarily about Covid or Q), and then show him that it is not true. He only believes it because he was taught (propagandized) to believe it.
JFK is a good example: Warren Commission story is pushed by the media and schools, but House Select Committee on Assassinations overruled it, and showed that JFK was killed by AT LEAST TWO GUNMEN. So, why does the media push a known lie?
Build on it from there.
This is some great advice. The way to redpill someone is to get them to ask questions about the world around them, and more importantly, get them to understand asking questions doesn't make them wrong or a bad person.