I think you just made the mistake of conceding my whole point. Yes, if she shouldn’t have had ANY caffeine, we have a problem. And the problem is that she walked to a self-service area where over 90% of the beverages are caffeinated (they have maybe 2 or 3 things that aren’t, tops?), and she filled her cup with the ONLY one that explicitly advertised being caffeinated.
Back to your question:
How many people are confusing a large iced coffee with a shot of espresso as a caffeine free beverage?
Yet again, I don’t think this question is relevant ESPECIALLY now that you conceded that the amount of caffeine is irrelevant and not problematic. But here’s the key quotes of the thread, and why I felt your question was out-of-touch:
“More caffeine than two energy drinks combined seems very excessive to me.” <–topic is amount of caffeine
"What coffee are you drinking that has almost 400mg of caffeine in it? Most have around 100mg." <–topic is amount of caffeine
"How many people are confusing a large iced coffee with a shot of espresso as a caffeine free beverage?" <–topic is “caffeine-free beverage”
Note, you just accepted my side of the underlying discussion as fact because it didn’t matter to your new point. That’s how I know your reply was a context-switch.