Didn't Think This Through: Difference between revisions

→‎Real Life: Added the "let businesses refuse to serve anyone they care to" decision of 2018 and its application in 2021 to the President who was in office when the decision was handed down
(→‎Real Life: replaced external links to Wikipedia page with direct links to the same pages)
(→‎Real Life: Added the "let businesses refuse to serve anyone they care to" decision of 2018 and its application in 2021 to the President who was in office when the decision was handed down)
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*** It could never be finished. This is the biggest area where [[Reality Ensues]]. Even if the project were feasible, it would take a lot of planning for it to even get started. Contracts would have to be made, blueprints drawn up, workers hired, and so much more, and it would take decades to actually finish. It took 30 years to complete 1-80, the first interstate coast to coast highway, it is unlikely that it could have been finished during Trump’s term of office, even if he had won reelection. It would be even more unlikely that his successor would have continued such a controversial project; even Vice President Pence had enough sense to abort his much-reviled and much criticized [[w:Religious Freedom Restoration Act (Indiana)|Religious Freedoms Act]] after he realized the disaster it would cause Indianapolis’ economy.
* The [[w:Gretchen Whitmer kidnapping plot|failed plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer]] in October 2020 was another example of a group thinking [[Easy Logistics]] was reality. What exactly would they have done had they succeeded? The absurdity of this plan was emphasized when testimony revealed they were also "considering" Virginia Governor Ralph Northam as a ''second'' target.
* Conservative lawyers fought all the way to the Supreme Court to win the right to let businesses refuse to serve anyone they care to -- a right that they only imagined being used by Christian bakeries to refuse to make cakes for gay weddings. Two years after the Supreme Court decision, social media outlets, online merchant sites, large banks, the PGA, and other private companies quickly and publicly stopped doing business with [[Donald Trump]] -- who was President when the Supreme Court decision was handed down.
 
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