Quote Originally Posted by Ken Watts
TATY wrote:
Furthermore, "I'd like it if they raised the salary for me" is not grammatically correct, because you don't say "the salary for someone" in English.

You don't say "the salary for John", you say "John's salary" which means "the salary of John".
Wrong. Certainly it's not the usual nor best way of saying it, but it is in use, and it is grammatically correct:
[quote:37n0tvp7]I is now chiefly used as the subject of an immediately following verb. Me occurs in every other position
Merriam-Webster Online Dictionary (2007) http://www.m-w.com/dictionary/me

Google hits:
"my salary" 934000
"salary for me" 156000
"salary of mine" 71500
"the salary for me" 20100
"my salary for me" 11700
"It's not the salary for me that's important"
http://www.workdirections.co.uk/files/u ... _id_26.pdf (page 6)
". . . but the Dodgers would have to eat a lot of the salary for me to consider it."
http://community.foxsports.com/blogs/Mo ... le_Wrap_Up
"While BofA perks are absurdly generous, the salary (for me) was 10-15% higher than any other job in town"
http://www.indeed.com/forum/cmp/Bank-Of ... 18797e4b04
"The boss offered me more money, but trust me, she would have to have doubled my salary for me to change my mind."
http://redheadeditor.blogspot.com/2005/ ... itted.html[/quote:37n0tvp7]

If you say "the salary for me" when trying to express "my salary" you are making a grammar mistake as you are using an incorrect preposition.

All your examples are in a different context and have a different meaning. Furthermore, as your existence proves, there are millions of people on the Internet who don't have a clue about English grammar, so random sites from Google aren't the best source of reference.