We live in an era where people who have got all the way to the highest office in the land now hilariously claim structural discrimination against the fact that, after varying amounts of time, they just weren’t good enough.
The Guardian.
Is structural discrimination against "people who have got..." or against "the fact that..." in the sentence above?
anonymous We live in an era where people who have got all the way to the highest office in the land now hilariously claim structural discrimination against the fact that, after varying amounts of time, they just weren’t good enough. Oof! " in the sentence above?
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anonymousWe live in an era where people who have got all the way to the highest office in the land now hilariously claim structural discrimination against the fact that, after varying amounts of time, they just weren’t good enough.
Oof!
anonymousIs structural discrimination against "people who have got..." or against "the fact th
The Guardian never disappoints. Their reputation for butchering the language is well earned and perennially bolstered. But that sentence is out of the norm even for them and is obviously a deliberate attempt to win some bad writing contest. Try to put it out of your mind.