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honestly from a linguistic perspective this is so painfully inaccurate. you're talking about native speakers here. what you might mean to say is that Germans use English closer to how the Brits use it. that is a defensible statement. but you're doing something different.
just because native speakers change how they use their own language, they aren't doing it "worse". they are adapting their tongue to their needs. one's mother language is deeply tied to identity, and cultural identities grow and shift through time. to say that their identity is "worse" is certainly a statement you could make, but you see the violence inherent in it, right?
who knows, there's plenty of criticisms to make of Americans. i probably have more than the average. but i'm not really comfortable with putting down entire groups of people based on how they use their mother tongue. and i'm certainly not going to try to pass off criticism of a culture as a statement of measurement like "you are bad at X"
For another example, there is an exact inverse in America. “Texas German” is much closer to how German was spoken around the time of German unification. Same with Quebec to French.