The nationwide march and demonstration had come to an end, but the intense online discussions about it had not subsided, with countless experts and high-level figures from all walks of life analyzing and dissecting the incident.
But no matter how many times the incident was reviewed, everyone had to admit that America's Tax Bureau, or rather David's handling of the situation, was textbook perfect.
They had figured out that Disney's previous confidence in negotiating with the Western Suburb Branch had stemmed from wanting to incite its hundreds of thousands of employees to pressure the branch.
However, the Western Suburb Branch had broken convention and cleverly allocated emergency funds to dissolve Disney's offensive.
The situation that followed was clear. The Western Suburb Branch could sit back and relax, because even if they paid the workers ten days of shutdown wages, it would cost no more than ten billion at most.
But Disney couldn't afford this.