A good gateway is to mention you were reading Thomas Paine's 'The Age of Reason' and were stunned/intrigued by his criticism of (((them))). If they don't do history, ask them if theyve heard about the Greater Israel Project, and the Clean Break Doctorine, and that many theorize Greater Israel's coming-to-be is why we had the Iraq War and fake WMDs.
Ask them if they know anything about the relationship between the Talmud, Judaism, and Communism, and the Bolsheviks in Russia being the primary example ( murdering Christians in mass et al).
If they do religion, Martin Luther's 'On Jews and Their Lies' is your gateway. If they respect Billy Graham, link them to Graham and Nixon's shockingly candid convo about (((them))) via 'Nixon: In His Own Words' on YouTube. They discuss the Synagogue of Satan and media influence.
Where most go wrong is referencing extremist fringe media or sources. To redpill a normie, wrap it in interesting, educational topics, context is paramount m8. Ask them if they know the Supreme Court is basically 50/50 Catholics and Jews, and how these ideologies cut down the middle on modern law/rulings.
For me, this process is easy. Where I am increasingly uneasy is the private part. I have been told that Gmail, for instance, illegally flags and stores account info, when certain keywords and (((them))) are used in emails. And then, (((anyone))) in your contacts gets an extremely subtle notification via a third party, totally inside baseball. And this is justified by the "never again" ideology.
That is extremely terrifying to me. And wouldn't surprise me. Notice how any Google searches about (((them))) in a negative context do not trigger popular searches.
For this reason, the people who mastered public relations, have one helluva public relations problem.
Witness how (((they))) sorta dogwhistle in the media re: Ann Coulter, Ron Paul (most redpilled all time), and Pat Buchanan ( whose career was ruined by the neocons). Be careful.