I think you mean "native English speakers."
I have been following this thread refraining myself not to reply in order not to disturb or muddle the discussion. But now I feel I must say some words.
We all love the English language, that is a fact. But we know there is a huge difference between prescriptive and descriptive grammar!
There is no such thing as right or wrong in such a simple form. Language is an interesting phenomena we study - we observe it; we are curious about it. People communicate among themselves using language, there is no a priori "rule" about it. But we, as human beings, try to find out the secrets (that is the "rules") hidden under the language phenomena. Therefore we model language; currently there are many different models at our disposal, some good and some not so good, but none perfect. The "rules" of language are to be discovered and understood by us, not to rule our/their way of speaking telling right from wrong, it is the opposite. If English speakers say something in such and such a way, that is correct by definition; if we don't understand the reasons we should work harder and enhance our models. Our aim is to understand why he speaks that way, not the other way around.
Of course the same is true for any other language besides English.
But of course!!