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Because they're wrong. And not in a "these kids and their new-fangled language" way, but in a "this is literally improper English" way.
Right, I get that, it's just that that particular incorrect usage annoys me more than most.
Yet "would've", "could've", and "should've" are fine, if a touch informal, and sound literally identical in most dialects and accents. View it as your own personal window into how your conversation partner engages with language.
It's not about sound. Would've is a contraction of "would have" not "would of."
Would of is not a different way to interact with English because the meaning of "have" and "of" are completely different.
LOL, all I really meant is you get to learn that they don't really engage with the language beyond translating sounds into letters. No real thought is given to why they say or write the things they do. It's useful information.
I am all for woulda, coulda, and shoulda.