Russell Greer / @theofficialinstaofrussellgreer grammar spergs

Thank you. There is no point in going through the rest of the document and pointing out all of the hideous errors. There are members here who will defend every one of them, for several obvious reasons. I’ll leave it now, but note that if I were the client, I wouldn’t pay for this filing.
Go read a Dog Bite filing and calm down.
 
Thank you. There is no point in going through the rest of the document and pointing out all of the hideous errors. There are members here who will defend every one of them, for several obvious reasons. I’ll leave it now, but note that if I were the client, I wouldn’t pay for this filing.
You pay lawyer for law. I don't know why you consider that grammar makes an legal argument more legally sound, but that is not the case. Everyone makes grammatical errors, judges included. There is a big difference between grammatical error by, lets say an author, and a lawyer, and if you can't see that, I'm sorry, but the issue is with you. There is also a difference between law and grammar. A grammatical mistake does not mean a legal one, no matter how much you want to equate the two
 
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You pay lawyer for law. I don't know why you consider that grammar makes an legal argument more legally sound, but that is not the case. Everyone makes grammatical errors, judges included. There is a big difference between grammatical error by, lets say an author, and a lawyer, and if you can't see that, I'm sorry, but the issue is with you.

Says you who says “lets say” when it should be “let’s say”. You would be kicked out of court for that if you were a lawyer.
 
Says you who says “lets say” when it should be “let’s say”. You would be kicked out of court for that if you were a lawyer.
Can you stop shitting up the thread with your pedantic nitpicking?
You veer off track more than Russ.

Anyway props to Skordas for pointing out Russ once again does not state a claim. It's a great callback to the last time they faced off.
 
Says you who says “lets say” when it should be “let’s say”. You would be kicked out of court for that if you were a lawyer.
Instead of addressing my point, you moved to grammar. I am only lead to believe that this means that you cannot, in good faith, address my points.

That being said, it is curious that you refuse to clarify what country you allegedly practice in. It can't be in Europe, nor US. I don't believe Canada is much different either.

Anyway, like I mentioned before, your arguments at best are in bad faith. A grammatical mistake does not mean a legal one, no matter how much you want to equate the two. I don't know why you are so allergic to reality of law practice. but grammatical mistakes happen, by both judges and lawyers.
 
Says you who says “lets say” when it should be “let’s say”. You would be kicked out of court for that if you were a lawyer.
Depends on how you're using it. English isn't my first language and even I know the difference between the two. One is third person and the other is a contraction.
Instead of addressing my point, you moved to grammar.
He's not even good with grammar, I don't know why he's even trying.
 
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