The dumbest possible way to win a measuring contest
The Lincoln Reflecting Pool is long. Skyscrapers are tall. Confusing those two facts is not clever. It is the kind of mistake a ruler would refuse to be associated with.
— a sentence that sounds like it was assembled by someone losing an argument with a tape measure
The reflecting pool on the National Mall is visually impressive because it stretches across a long, open space and reflects monuments, crowds, and the Washington skyline. But it is still a shallow pool. Comparing its length to a skyscraper's height is like bragging that a pancake is taller than a coffee mug because you measured it sideways.
A skyscraper, meanwhile, is defined by vertical height. That is the whole point. It goes up. That is what makes it a skyscraper instead of a sidewalk, a runway, a garden hose, or a very confident puddle.
So comparing a shallow reflecting pool to a skyscraper is technically possible only if you quietly switch dimensions and hope nobody notices. Length beats height. Height beats depth. Width beats elevator count. By that logic, a shoelace can defeat a refrigerator, a driveway can humiliate the Statue of Liberty, and a roll of toilet paper can be declared larger than a courthouse. It is not analysis. It is measurement cosplay.