We all love to read our Shakespeare, or Milton, or nuanced English that conveys a thought in an intricate, and multi-layered manner. But on a forum where people are coming from so many backgrounds and different ways of thinking and ways of expressing themselves - to say nothing about their state of mind when leaving a comment - maybe there is a lesson to be learned here that will never be fully considered.
When I began to pursue a technical career, I had training in several foreign lands, and I was capable of understanding those languages, but discovered time and again that English was a lingua franca of technical training in many instances: whether it be Italy, Spain, Finland, Japan or Brazil.
The language as used was sometimes poorly executed, but if the mind was brilliant enough, or the subject important enough, you tried to understand and were rewarded in so doing.
I am constantly reminded that some of the greatest people that have ever lived were poor spellers. And of late you will read or hear some of the people educated in the finest schools in the world, using bad grammer, and not just for effect.
While it is a pleasure to read excellent writing with the proper spelling and the proper grammer, it is quality of the thought that is most important to me - and it shall always remain so.