question archive In this sentence, the subject is "mistakes" rather than the person who made the mistakes, so the sentence wants to emphasize the mistakes rather than the responsible person

In this sentence, the subject is "mistakes" rather than the person who made the mistakes, so the sentence wants to emphasize the mistakes rather than the responsible person

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In this sentence, the subject is "mistakes" rather than the person who made the mistakes, so the sentence wants to emphasize the mistakes rather than the responsible person. This makes me feel that this expression is intended to distract the audience's attention and deliberately avoid mentioning the responsible person and his or her identity, thus it is suspected of shirking responsibility. At the same time, the length of passive sentences is often longer than that of active sentences, so I would think that the speaker is procrastinating and unwilling to mention the key points.

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