You might think I'm being harsh here, but she graduated from law school and is a native English speaker. If she's trying to present herself as a smart, professional woman , she should tweet in proper English.— π₯π»πΈπ π±π π πΆπ·π₯ (@lizburgh) April 29, 2020
Here are some of the most interesting red flags that stood out to me:
— π₯π»πΈπ π±π π πΆπ·π₯ (@lizburgh) April 29, 2020
She is avid NPR listener who doesn't quite have the hang of how we use articles in English. pic.twitter.com/gT2iGcUhfv— π₯π»πΈπ π±π π πΆπ·π₯ (@lizburgh) April 29, 2020
She has "medical and education debt".— π₯π»πΈπ π±π π πΆπ·π₯ (@lizburgh) April 29, 2020
And a lot of otherwise poor grammar. pic.twitter.com/9hFftuubAs
Now scroll back up and compare it to how she speaks now. Either she lost fluency in English or someone else is writing her tweets.— π₯π»πΈπ π±π π πΆπ·π₯ (@lizburgh) April 29, 2020
Those scribbles on my screenshots are red flags. I was just marking the best examples out of the bunch.— π₯π»πΈπ π±π π πΆπ·π₯ (@lizburgh) April 29, 2020
I wasn't able to say "this sounds okay" and keep scrolling past very many of her tweets!