This is getting dumber by the second. But here goes.
Rick Reuben wrote:No, an attack ad is a thing.
Yes, I know. What I meant was: In the post in question, Minotaur used the descriptor
attack-ad to characterize a context, literally:
The term "negatives" CAN be and IS used in an "attack-ad" context.
The use of quotation marks here tells me Minotaur is calling into question the validity of both terms. It has nothing to do whatsoever with the use of hyphens in compound adjectives.
Now, to Rick's point, we are probably not going to see a lot of hyphenated attack-ad constructions in Google or the NYT or anywhere else, because most journalists would avoid it, favoring instead "So-called attack ads often make use of the term 'negatives.'"
But for the
third motherfucking time: it's a judgment call for the writer to make. Would anyone have missed the hyphen, had it not appeared there? Probably not. But is it an incorrect application of the hyphen? No. The rule here is not definitive, as are the rules of subject-verb agreement. Does it demonstrate some sort of THC-addled incompetence on Minotaur's part? Definitely not. Will people continue to argue about this much longer? We will have to examine this in a future-time context.
Now, please: Back to Obamamania.