The “slippery slope fallacy fallacy” (i.e. the fallacy of claiming that slippery slope is a fallacy) is mostly confusion of short-term tactical goals with long-term strategic goals, and pretending that just because a certain group only focuses on its short-term tactical goals at the moment, that they won’t continue further towards their long-term strategic goals once their short-term goals are achieved.
There are multiple independent mechanisms how tactical goals (which you might find unproblematic, or usually at least less problematic and not worth bothering with the effort of opposing them actively) will help them pursue their strategic goals (which can often be horrible, but are much easier achieved step by step than at once), but the mechanism is pretty much irrelevant (there was this paper about this in legal context, I’m sure you’ve read it, I don’t think focusing on mechanism makes much sense) - the pattern is just too ubiquitous and works the same way regardless of mechanism of the particular case.
The “slippery slope fallacy fallacy” (i.e. the fallacy of claiming that slippery slope is a fallacy) is mostly confusion of short-term tactical goals with long-term strategic goals, and pretending that just because a certain group only focuses on its short-term tactical goals at the moment, that they won’t continue further towards their long-term strategic goals once their short-term goals are achieved.
There are multiple independent mechanisms how tactical goals (which you might find unproblematic, or usually at least less problematic and not worth bothering with the effort of opposing them actively) will help them pursue their strategic goals (which can often be horrible, but are much easier achieved step by step than at once), but the mechanism is pretty much irrelevant (there was this paper about this in legal context, I’m sure you’ve read it, I don’t think focusing on mechanism makes much sense) - the pattern is just too ubiquitous and works the same way regardless of mechanism of the particular case.