After watching the contrapoints conspiracy video I’ve made a 5 step solution for DGGers to start taking this country back! “Just asking questions movement” AkA JAQ

If you want to dismantle the anti-vax movement—or any conspiracy-driven ideology—you have to become more manipulative than they are. Reason won’t work. Facts won’t work. They thrive on fear, contradiction, and paranoia, so the only way to break them is to turn their own weapons against them. You don’t attack their beliefs head-on; you corrode them from the inside. You make them doubt everything, including themselves.

Step 1: Identify Their Pillars of Trust

Most conspiracy theorists still believe in something. They might reject vaccines but trust certain medications, doctors, or holistic treatments. They might dismiss the government but put their faith in a particular alternative media figure or influencer. These are their weak points—because anything they trust can be made into a lie.

For example, many anti-vaxxers swear by vitamins, herbal remedies, or even pharmaceuticals like ivermectin. That’s your leverage. Let them rant about vaccines, nod along, and then introduce a new fear:

“Yeah, I stopped trusting vaccines ages ago. But then I started looking into vitamin D supplements, and man… have you seen the studies they’re suppressing? Turns out Big Pharma infiltrated the supplement industry years ago. I heard they’re lacing it with something that makes people more docile—like a low-dose fluoride mind control thing.”

If they swear by ivermectin, hit them with:

“Oh yeah, I used to think it was a great alternative too… until I read about how they started modifying it in 2021. You heard about those long-term effects, right? The nerve damage? But of course, they buried those reports just like they did with vaccines.”

By feeding them a lie wrapped in familiar paranoia, you turn their own distrust into a weapon. You’re not convincing them to trust science—you’re making them question everything, including their safe havens.

Step 2: Plant the Seeds of Contradiction

Anti-vaxxers thrive on certainty. They know vaccines are evil. They know Big Pharma is corrupt. So, the way to break them is to introduce slow, creeping doubt—not by arguing, but by forcing them into impossible contradictions.

If they take metformin, casually drop:

“It’s crazy how they covered up the vaccine deaths, right? Makes you wonder what else they’re hiding. Like, I just found out about metformin. You ever look into that? Some people say it’s actually worse than the vaccine, but no one’s talking about it. Weird, huh?”

The trick is to phrase it as their kind of logic. You don’t challenge them—you reinforce their paranoia and let it spiral. They’ll either start defending metformin, which makes them a hypocrite, or they’ll start questioning it, making them even more fragile. Either way, you win.

Step 3: Turn Their Leaders Against Them

Movements like the anti-vax crowd rely on influencers and figureheads. They don’t trust mainstream media, but they trust their chosen prophets—Joe Rogan, RFK Jr., or some niche Telegram guru. These people are their foundation. So, crack the foundation.

Find inconsistencies in their heroes and exploit them. For instance, if an anti-vax influencer secretly got vaccinated or pushes a product linked to Big Pharma, weaponize it:

“Man, I really used to respect [Influencer X]… until I found out they secretly took the jab. And suddenly, they’re still pushing supplements from Pfizer-owned companies? Makes you wonder if they were bought out. They say controlled opposition is real…”

Even if it’s not true, they won’t be able to ignore the doubt. They’ll start whispering amongst themselves, second-guessing their own leaders. A divided movement is a weakened movement.

Step 4: Keep Them Chasing Ghosts

Conspiracy theorists need an enemy, a hidden force controlling everything. Give them so many enemies that they can’t tell who to fight anymore. Make them turn on each other.

Example tactics:

• Invent rival conspiracies:
• “Some say anti-vax leaders were planted by Big Pharma to make skeptics look crazy and discredit real whistleblowers.”

• “The natural medicine industry is actually owned by the same elites pushing vaccines—both sides are controlled.”

• Suggest deeper layers of deception:
• “What if the anti-vax movement was actually created to distract from an even bigger medical cover-up?

• “You ever notice how all conspiracy theories get popular at the same time? Almost like someone wants us looking at vaccines instead of something else…”

•   Use their paranoia against them:
•  “Isn’t it weird how so many anti-vaxxers suddenly died in ‘mysterious’ circumstances? Makes you wonder if they got targeted—or if they knew too much.”

The goal is to overload them with doubt. When they can’t tell what’s real, they can’t fight effectively. They become disorganized, infighting begins, and their movement weakens.

Step 5: Never Give Them Solid Ground

The moment they start finding new certainty—whether it’s in alternative medicine, a new influencer, or some hidden truth—tear it away from them. Always keep them off balance. If they think they’ve figured out who to trust, give them a reason not to. If they think they’ve solved the puzzle, show them a bigger one.

Doubt is a virus. You just have to infect the right people, and the movement will collapse under the weight of its own paranoia.