A less charitable person than I might suggest that before embarking on a career as an internet forum user you learn to type and to check your deathless prose for typos and spelling errors before pressing the "Post" button.
Ah the spelling police strike again, that last recourse of the intellectually bereft.
For the benefit of those who have not read it elsewhere, let me retell this story about the inevitability of typos.
Typos are almost impossible to eliminate. About fifteen years ago I was a Treaty Officer in the Foreign Office in London. They are the people who stand to the left or right of the VIP signing the Treaty. Everyone must have seen them on TV at some time, but what they may not realise is that the Treaty Officer is also responsible for the production, presentation, and often the drafting, of the Treaty.
I was responsible for a Treaty Signing Ceremony in No 10 during the visit of the President of India, and there were five or six Treaties to be signed. Now these treaties are checked, re-checked, and re-re checked by five or six people on either side before they are printed on the gold-edged vellum, (which cost about ?3. 00 per sheet) and ribboned and sealed and bound into Red Morocco Leather folders. In theory therefore they should be one hundred percent error free.
We were half way through the ceremony and I glanced at the next treaty to be signed and there was this typo. The only thing I could do was to amend it in longhand, using the special ?Treaty Pen?, (you do not want to know how much these cost), go to Douglas Hurd and the Indian Foreign Minister, explain to them what had happened, and get them both to initial both copies of the Treaty.
Thankfully this was the only time it happened to me, but it goes to show that even in the best controlled circumstances, typos can creep in.