Everyone knows the principle of "loading" a question to try to elicit the desired result, but what happens when any of these become part of our everyday terminology. The example that sprang to mind was "Make, buy or reuse?". Clearly the intention here is that the "make" option is not favoured, but does the ordering assign undue preference to "reuse" over "buy"?

A more interesting example is not normally quoted as a question, but can easily be paraphrased as such without altering the meaning: "Evolution or revolution?". This is contrasting a process generally thought of as good (it did result in us humans, after all :) with one that has many negative connotations. However, if the question were instead put as "Renovate or innovate?", I suspect that this would elicit the opposite answer. And arguably the latter form more accurately describes many situations in which the "Evolution, not revolution" advice is given.

Finally, a note on the title of this post, just in case it is not immediately obvious to people. It was inspired by the common practice of distinguising the two meanings of "free" using the qualifiers "as in beer" and "as in speech". The more common meaning of "loaded" when describing questions would, I guess, be "as in dice". However, I wanted to convey the idea that they could be dangerous if you didn't pay them enough attention, so "as in gun" seemed appropriate.