It was an excellent share you although I don't quite think "turning off CSS" would be my preferred defense.
You can paste to an intermediate area to be sure you didn't catch something hidden from whichever site you don't trust (which allows users to inline arbitrary HTML elements with arbitrary styles).
This is a habit one already might be in if they want to avoid being tracked from clicking on, say, Google search results. You'll avoid some of their tracking features if you copy the link you want and paste it to some text-holding zone first. (This also avoids the site you land on knowing your "referer".)
I knew it would take a few bare minutes before someone would come to make that distinction about how Google search links work.
Then I would have to say "okay copy the domain and path from your search result, which isn't a link, and which Google probably hides already (so this new advice won't work any more) or they will hide it some day, so the system doesn't work as literally as I described it."
So if Google has found more and more ways to avoid people avoiding their tracking, that's fine, and what I said literally doesn't apply if you take it 100% literally, but at least you understand what I'm saying about how to avoid the naive copy paste surprise.