It's "today's GOP," not the "today's GOP" Just like "I'm going to prom"https://twitter.com/ThomasEWoods/status/986475524838117376 …
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Replying to @michaelmalice
Still can't believe you defend that atrocity. "Going to prom" sounds like something a valley girl would say.
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Replying to @ThomasEWoods
or, you know, every reputable news sourcepic.twitter.com/CRgCJoI3Of
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Replying to @michaelmalice @ThomasEWoods
Headlines aren't proper sentences. They often drop definite articles that you would normally use.
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Replying to @Djomo_Arigato @ThomasEWoods
that is untrue with regards to every example i posted
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Replying to @michaelmalice @ThomasEWoods
Sure, if you assume what you're setting out to prove.
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Replying to @Djomo_Arigato @ThomasEWoods
im not assuming shit, those were the top examples google generated
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Replying to @michaelmalice @ThomasEWoods
So because they were headlines spat out by Google, that makes them proper sentences?
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no, the second and third are. and the first did not cut articles of speech, cf. "a hearse". hence "every example" this conversation is over.
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