I don’t know how the survey was done, but one silver lining is that if the respondents were asked those questions in the same order they are shown then the last question was given last in that set. So the people being surveyed are to some extent being “brought towards it” by the preceding questions. See this Yes Minister clip (although the survey above is much less dramatic example, and they published all the questions, so they are being legitimate):
You could probably cook up a set of preceding questions that would have delivered the opposite result. Something like: “Do you think Germans in WW2 should have resisted/criticised their government more?”, following with questions about a non-specific country’s people criticising its government during a non-specific war, then going to that final question.
I don’t know how the survey was done, but one silver lining is that if the respondents were asked those questions in the same order they are shown then the last question was given last in that set. So the people being surveyed are to some extent being “brought towards it” by the preceding questions. See this Yes Minister clip (although the survey above is much less dramatic example, and they published all the questions, so they are being legitimate):
You could probably cook up a set of preceding questions that would have delivered the opposite result. Something like: “Do you think Germans in WW2 should have resisted/criticised their government more?”, following with questions about a non-specific country’s people criticising its government during a non-specific war, then going to that final question.