It hasn't gone to Reynolds yet but it's cleared the Assembly, 45-4 in Senate and 68-27 in the House.
Basically, Iowa's new law requires that any employer mandate for vaccinations must include a religious exemption.
But going one further, it gives it teeth by saying that employees fired over vaccine status receive unemployment benefits.
https://owl.excelsior.edu/argument-and-critical-thinking/logical-fallacies/logical-fallacies-slippery-slope/
Eat shit
Again, it's part of the war on pattern recognition. You haven't disproven the slippery slope. You've proven the modern academy is completely disconnected from reality, but since you're a temporal chauvinist you are physically incapable of recognizing reality yourself.
When has the slippery slope ever been proven wrong in the real world? Sex crimes have gone up as pornography has become more accessible. The number of children identifying as LGBT has skyrocketed since teaching kids about gay sex, as has sex crimes with kids. Women have attempted to become front-line soldiers since getting the vote. Lincoln statues were torn down after Confederate statues were allowed to be torn down.
Spez: Nice appeal to authority by the way. Not a great look for someone complaining about fallacies.
Slippery slope and hot hand fallacies are very similar. They both imply that because something is happening it will continue to happen. It’s your brains pattern recognition tricking you into believing you’re prophetic. You aren’t.
You still haven't offered any real world examples of the slippery slope being wrong. It's also not prophecy coming out of nowhere. It's recognizing fundamental truths that societies have learned the hard way and continue to repeat the hard way, and these truths have been handed down for millennia. Tradition provides solutions for problems that have been forgotten. For example, by throwing out traditional sexual morals for consent the result is sexual mores dictated by power, as demonstrated by Harvey Weinstein. Please show real world examples of the slippery slope being wrong.