Because nothing says “accident” like leaving a prisoner in the middle of a railroad crossing!

  • SCB@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    hit by train

    hit by car

    hit by a pitch

    hit by stray bullet

    struck by new knowledge

    This is just the way our natural grammatical structure works.

      • SCB@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        We’re not having a discussion about grammar, we’re having a discussion about how phrases can be misleading even if technically correct, and how those phrases can end up serving inhuman agendas.

        We’re having a discussion about the way a person wrote a headline, and I explained that, rather than believe an elaborate conspiracy theory, you could acknowledge that this is just the way English grammatical structures work.

        The alternative to “hit by a train” is going to be multiple sentences long to convey the same information. Your conspiracy theory about it being a deflection falls apart because the entire article is about how the officer is legally and ethically at fault, accepts that, and that the family understands that.

        “Trapped prisoner in path of train” oddly enough, is slanted language with misleading nuances.