Example Questions Part 2:
What is truth?
How do you know what is true?
Why do you trust [n] information source?
Why do you distrust opposing information sources?
[Questions that get at the root of trust are great at destabilizing trust in bad actors. P.S. It is morally ok to mistrust someone!]
Do you think your sources might be keeping information away from you that would change your mind?
Why do you need that to be true?
How would you know if you are wrong?
What would happen if you are wrong? How would that feel? How would you cope with that?
What evidence would convince you that your conclusions are incorrect?
What do you think might convince me of your position?
If you were being manipulated, how would you know?
What makes you different from people who are being manipulated? Why would you know and they wouldn’t?
How do you define "manipulation"? How does it work?
Do you feel like you've worked hard and did everything right and now you're not getting what you were promised?
Where is the line for deciding [n – who deserves a safety net, what the optimal rate of taxation is, punishment for a specific crime, who gets to immigrate, what someone's gender is, etc]?
Who should decide [n] and why?
...for who? (Safe for who? Good for who? Profitable for who? Efficient for who?)
Who benefits the most from that?
How do you benefit from this situation/policy/value/talking point?
What's in it for them?
Who do you think is incentivized to be behind [n]?
What does that rule incentivize?
What outcome would you like to see?
By what standards will you measure the outcome?
When [historical law passed or action taken] happened, what did you think the outcome would be? Did that come to pass?
🧵
#Thanksgiving #AbuseCulture
#AskQuestions
#deconditioning
#cults