I had a feeling if I posted that, I'd be at risk of unchecking the box. My defense to keep the box checked: My understanding is that the interference of classical waves produces a different pattern than that of quantum waves. Granted, I don't have such a great eye that I observed the pattern on my garage wall, and probably already a couple IPA's into it anyway, said, "Yep, that's it! Let's check the box." I assumed, given it was a laser, that the interference pattern I saw must be quantum interference. If the classical kind of interference can also happen with a laser shooting through two nails, then it's checkmate and I have to uncheck. I assumed that enough experiments have been done with lasers that it is established as always a different pattern than water's (or bullets) when going through two slits. 100% of the time. Don't soften the blow, this isn't Sic et Non, and around here, we're happy to learn that we're wrong about something. If it's possible I saw something other than quantum interference, let me know. (I'm reading your account of Young as confirming that a laser in my scenario would produce the same pattern as if light were a classical wave, and so the box has to be unchecked)
Wave interference is only weird if a single particle does it
to be sure, because I either missed this, forgot about it, or the youtube videos I watched in the past were wrong: Normal light, or my laser through the nails interferes like a stream of water in the same scenario. The shift in pattern only happens at one quanta at a time?
We can't take farmers and take all their people and send them back because they don't have maybe what they're supposed to have. They get rid of some of the people who have been there for 25 years and they work great and then you throw them out and they're replaced by criminals.