Again, that's not at all how a coinjoin transaction works.
I never said it was. I'm just pointing out that even without a coordinator which directly funds blockchain analysis, Wasabi is still useless.
Wasabi isn't useless, it gives you privacy on your coins. Verify this for yourself - here's a coinjoin transaction on the blockchain:
https://mempool.space/tx/01a1a055719129397fb8344b5a09e6cfe72868c8e1d750e621d8b580c96bf77bNo matter how long you try, there is no way to determine which outputs are owned by which inputs.
Perfect real world use case for Wasabi
Perfect real world use for a good coinjoin implementation which is not pro-censorship and anti-fungibility.
Coinjoin implementations are not "pro censorship and anti fungibility". Coinjoin implementations specify how to create the most privately sized outputs using inputs from multiple users.