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[-] rsuri@lemmy.world 23 points 3 months ago

I have a theory where Trump actually can't really read, he can maybe vaguely tell what 100 or so words look like and has been faking it ever since he was a small child, to the point where he's very good at fake reading. This would explain why he does so terribly with teleprompters.

[-] Pringles@lemm.ee 2 points 3 months ago

I believe that. You never see him actually read something. At most he glances at something before having someone else read it and summarize it for him in a dumbed down way.

[-] BruceTwarzen@lemm.ee 5 points 3 months ago

I actually know a guy who can't really read. I mean he can, but he has some learning disability mixed with adhd. He got through school okay, and i never really knew. I only figured it out when we played video games together and he would read things wrong, and always say something like: "what?" Pretend to read it again but quietly and then say:"aaah, got it." But he didn't get it, he just read the 3 words that seemed important and the rest was context clues.

I think it's nuts that no one ever questions the shit Donnie says. Is it because they know how much of an embarrassment that would be? Like every time he talks shit about a country or even state, he should be asked if he can point on it on a map. Or when he just does stupid ass monologues like his nuclear speech, wouldn't you ask again and again until his story makes even a lick of sense? One guy didn't get elected because he spelled potato wrong. I remember obama doing an ama and he wrote "an meteor" instead of "a meteor" or some shit, and the spelling mistake was the biggest thing of the ama.

[-] ____@infosec.pub 1 points 3 months ago

Dan Quayle is the infamous "potato" politician.

English isn't a particularly easy language, on a relative basis, at least for those who don't study it academically at the post-grad level. "An" vs "A" is one of the last errors I'd ever fault someone for, because it's poorly defined and tends to have precious little impact on the actual meaning of the overall sentence.

Is it a marginally annoying error when I "know" what's correct in my head and I'm listening to someone else make the error? For sure. Would I ever point it out to someone on their second, third, or fourth language? Not a chance, because it's largely an irrelevancy and also damnably difficult to explain efficiently as a "rule".

[-] CitizenKong@lemmy.world 4 points 3 months ago

He couldn't follow his intelligence briefings, which had to be reduced to fit on one page, without it mentioning his name in every other sentence. He's only gotten more senile since.

this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2024
812 points (100.0% liked)

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