>>941968685 (OP)
Why do psyops always start with a leading question?
Answer:
If I tell you that your favorite color is blue, that instantly triggers "Fuck you! Nobody tells me what my favorite color is!" AKA the "FU Factor." You persuade people by telling them the direct facts of a situation maybe 1 out of 20 times.
If on the other hand I ask, "Why do so many people find the color blue pleasing?" Not only have I assumed something favorable about the color blue and in essence embedded a subtle command in the question, but the brilliant thing about it is that in order for your brain to process what it just took in, it not only had to assume the premise as true but then uses it's own memories and ideas to generate an answer... and few people, very exceedingly few people, resist their own subconscious thought process.
While, "Why do so many people find the color blue pleasing?" isn't going to immediately change a person's favorite color to blue, it is a starting point and when you have an army of paid demoralization agents? Why if the agenda were to change your favorite color you might just start noticing the color blue far more often than you did prior.
So make it a practice to instead of immediately jumping into your feelings when you hear a leading question to stop and immediately ask yourself who other than you would benefit if you started to think in that direction.