I'm working on something on the subject of dangerous and predatory memes. And oh yes, predatory memes exist.
Please read this thread. When anyone talks about this sort of thing, the first reaction is "It can't happen to me, I'm far too smart for that". When it is pointed out how many people who fell for such things thought precisely that, the next reaction is a longer and more elaborate version of "It can't happen to me, I'm far too smart for that".
I'm thinking the very hardest bit is going to be getting across to people that it can happen to you. Even if you're smart and know all about biases (though knowing about them does not mean you don't have them) and think of yourself as rational and so forth. The predatory memes have evolved to eat people who think it can't happen to them.
It is quite possible I am being overcautious. Well, fine.
I'm thinking the very hardest bit is going to be getting across to people that it can happen to you. [...] The predatory memes have evolved to eat people who think it can't happen to them.
Certainly there are people who can't be infected with strong cultish memes, and when those people believe that it can't happen to them, they are correct. There are also people who believe so incorrectly, but this is not a strong argument for impossibility of holding that belief correctly. You seem to be overstating the case, implying undue confidence.
A few examples (in approximately increasing order of controversy):
If you proceed anyway...