It is interesting that there is a space between fantasy and land.
Isn’t fantasyland usually just one word?
fantasyland
[ fan-tuh-see-land, -zee- ]SHOW IPA
noun
a place or circumstance existing only in the imagination or as an ideal; dream world.
an amusement park whose attractions are based on a theme, as fairy tales or exotic locales; theme park.
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/fantasyland
Is the space there to indicate something is missing? Such as the “is” that would make it “island.”
We discussed last year the possibility that this Four Seasons place in Philly could be some sort of “keystone” for the election fraud. I forget the details, but it was something along the lines of what happened there or by people connected to the place being the thing that busts the election fraud “case,” as it were, wide open.
I can’t imagine that the owner of the adult bookstore is that powerful in the grand scheme of things, but is he or his store connected to something that busts the case wide open?