'A cult-like belief in contemporary collectivism, does your audience need the definition of collectivism?'
That might be a bit monotone and condescending for a TV interview, but keep the pressure on the interviewer when she's asking underhanded questions. The question is underhanded because the interviewer deliberately interrupts a train-of-thought with an open question, and doesn't have softball questions to demonstrate that she, the interviewer, has researched the leading pro and con viewpoints on wokism. Also, any ambitious guest should have the goal of patronizing a normie audience.
'A cult-like belief in contemporary collectivism, does your audience need the definition of collectivism?'
That might be a bit monotone and condescending for a TV interview, but keep the pressure on the interviewer when she's asking underhanded questions. The question is underhanded because the interviewer deliberately interrupts a train-of-thought with an open question, and doesn't have softball questions to demonstrate that she, the interviewer, has researched the leading pro and con viewpoints on wokism. Also, any ambitious guest should have the goal of patronizing a normie audience.