this post was submitted on 27 Jun 2023
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But... that article says the opposite of what it says it says.
I mean, it claims that the problem was the lack of an Oxford comma (in front of and "or", rather than an "and", by the way), but the fact is the ambiguity is caused by the fact that the comma is even an option. The judge is inferring that the comma should have existed and reading the sentence that way.
Notably, if what the writers of the text meant was that "packing for shipment or distribution" is a single clause it also wouldn't have had a comma.
I can't stress this enough, the only reason that case went the way it did is that the Oxford comma exists.