>>/72439/
 >>/72441/
> I'm beginning to suspect a coworker I thought I woke up as a traitor. 
I'm British, and I'm completely opposed to your particular agenda - and I've been fishing around wherever I could for people like you. Back when I was in university, I caught one, and let him think I was just a poor misguided soul that needed a few redpills. Once I'd coaxed him into saying something extreme enough, I reported him to the police. I haven't caught another would-be redpiller yet, but I'm eager to - perhaps when I switch jobs next year. 
> Maybe they feel as I do and are spreading the message.
It's not terribly hard to inoculate against so-called "redpills" once you know the ins and outs of them. You just need to provide people with a counter argument to "something you might hear from someone", and just like that you've got them on the look-out for these suspicious lines, detecting "redpills" and rejecting them as a result. 
> It's tiresome.
the lemmings one is right: you aren't going to get anywhere by trying to convince "your" people. systems of political control don't change merely because a lot of people dislike it. The fact is that deep down you aren't really committed to changing the system at all, you're just temporarily misguided, and you'll learn better soon.