Bobby Piton on Telegram
(media.greatawakening.win)
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Typos and grammatical errors are an interesting negative dog whistle. They repulse the educated, while the masses do not mind.
Given that the educated are turning out wrong about everything, I wonder if their preference should be a top priority. I appreciate good spelling, but the kind of person who gets hung up on it seems to miss the forest for the trees.
Not at all. We're talking about someone who writes executive orders and other legislation. This matters in the world of written law.
https://files.catbox.moe/dj6asv.png
This opinion comes from a high school drop out raised in a broken home, so I think you should reconsider your biases.
My opinion comes from someone who did reconsider his biases. :)
My bias was strongly against any kind of grammatical and spelling mistakes. Then I realized that some of the most successful people I know, who had knowledge and insights I did not have, can't, or won't bother to, spell properly.
Dyslexia is not that rare and does not actually prevent a person from being clever, insightful and successful.