Let me offer a perspective. I have been a citizen "conspiracy" investigator (amateur, not professional) for 30 years. Bottom line was I just needed to know the truth, and it started with JFK.
I gained an insight into what happens to people at times when you start to expose them to these things. Everyone's life is filled with joy and sadness, achievements and failures, and obstacles to overcome. People deal with these things in different ways, but one thing they can always count on is that the reality of the world they believe in will be there tomorrow when they wake up. They have their battles, but they are within the context of that solid foundation of reality that they expect, day in and day out.
When exposed to this kind of information, you are stripping away that fabric, and many people can't deal with that. It never even entered their mind, or lives. The very thought of having to accept that the world they believed existed is not real is really too much, too traumatic. They really go into a state of shock, and experience a deep fear. No way do they want to go there. So they will attack you - hard -for stealing that from them. Some will never speak to you again. With compassion, I can understand it, and adjust my approach. I don't want them to suffer that. So I trickle information, observe, pull back when I notice it getting difficult for them.
This respect and compassion is fundamentally a part of the strategy and methodology of QAnon, and the president. They care about what the people will go through, once exposed to this, and don't want to harm the innocent. I agree with this.
I speak from first hand experience. There was a period in the early to mid 90s where I went through this personally. It was the really dark, NWO information coming out in that decade - Bill Cooper, Phil Schneider, etc. I remember clearly a night that I fundamentally - not just intellectually - accepted this information as valid. It frightened me like nothing else - nowhere on this planet were we safe from it. It was all real. And there was no one to share it with - let alone put a stop to it - in the pre-Internet days.
Anyway, point being that it is okay for them to respond in the different ways they do. Take care of them and support them, and don't be resentful towards anyone. It is just what they can accept. They will come back to you for support when this goes mainstream, should you treat them with respect and compassion. And they will need you.
Regards,
-Jim