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I guess my fancy-dancy linguistics degree gives me an unfair bias when examining points of view such as these, so I'll keep this short.
Asking someone to abandon their native language is asking them to abandon their culture. That, in a land that is self-identified as multicultural melting pot, is nonsense.
In the early 80's, when signs in Spanish began popping up in places like Las Angeles and Miami, America was identified by advertisers as the 5th largest Spanish-speaking market in the world. This started as an issue of advertising, not of some forced multiculturalism.
Yep, we're a melting pot, where you let your culture melt off onto others while absorbing the dominant American culture.
"What's the most unusual place you've absorbed the dominant American culture?"
"That'd be up the butt, Bob."
barfo
Yep, we're a melting pot, where you let your culture melt off onto others while absorbing the dominant American culture. We're not Chex Mix where all the cultures live among each other, but distinctly. In fact, the most successful immigrants have had the highest degree of assimilation. And yes, it's possible to assimilate and still keep touch with your former culture.
???I hope that dumb bitch realises English was created in England... So it's a foreign language.
???
For starters, English was NOT created in England. It was brought to Britain in the 5th Century AD by Germanic settlers from various parts of northwest Germany.
But that isn't even the issue. The isssue is what is the dominant language of the culture? One of the things that makes America great is that people from all cultures come here and assimilate. When the Poles and the Italians and Russians immigrated here, they learned English and "melted" into the culture. Their English language skills helped them succeed and flourish. They were proud to learn English and proud to be Americans. They may have continued to speak their native languages at home, but they used English in all public forums.
That is the issue today. ALL of our immigrants need to learn English to help keep us a homogenous and unified people. The more you are allowed to use your own language in the marketplace, the less reason you have to learn English, and the more disadvantaged you are when it comes to getting a job and melting into the mainstream.
Yeah, all Americans should learn Spanish so we can communicate with people who don't want to learn English.Waaaah, people don't speak my language as much as i'd like and I refuse to learn their language... waaah.
-- "Immigrants who speak English 'not well' or 'not at all' have median weekly earnings approximately 57 percent of those of U.S. born workers."
-- "Poverty and the need for public benefits, such as food stamps, are more closely related to limited English proficiency than with citizenship or legal status."
-- "79 percent of Americans, and 81 percent of first and second generation Americans favor making English the official language of the United States."
"Poverty and the need for public benefits, such as food stamps, are more closely related to limited English proficiency than with citizenship or legal status."
http://www.gopusa.com/commentary/guest/2008/hrs_06231.shtml
For starters, English was NOT created in England. It was brought to Britain in the 5th Century AD by Germanic settlers from various parts of northwest Germany.
Shooter said:But that isn't even the issue. The isssue is what is the dominant language of the culture? One of the things that makes America great is that people from all cultures come here and assimilate. When the Poles and the Italians and Russians immigrated here, they learned English and "melted" into the culture. Their English language skills helped them succeed and flourish. They were proud to learn English and proud to be Americans. They may have continued to speak their native languages at home, but they used English in all public forums.
One of the things that makes America great is that people from all cultures come here and assimilate. When the Poles and the Italians and Russians immigrated here, they learned English and "melted" into the culture. Their English language skills helped them succeed and flourish. They were proud to learn English and proud to be Americans. They may have continued to speak their native languages at home, but they used English in all public forums.
Learning other languages is bad.
Teaching children more than one language is bad.
Learning science is bad.
Teaching children science is bad.
I see a trend in thought here...
STOP LEARNING!
STOP TEACHING!
Guess what Republicans, Mexican-American children are almost all bi-lingual. That means in 20 years your children won't be able to get a good job because Mexican-American workers will be far more skilled at that point. You'll have nothing to blame except your hatred and ignorance. Getting a management job without having the ability to effectively communicate to a diverse workforce will only become more difficult and workers who chose (or had it chosen for them) that they will only learn english will have to settle for bottom end jobs.
Learning is never bad. Keeping someone from learning is always bad. Getting upset at other people because you don't want to learn is humiliating, even if you don't realize it.
Well it is a 3 year requirement in most high schools - If you want an advanced diploma.Thanks for your input. I'm right-of-center. I believe that there should be an official national language and that it should be English. I don't care if someone speaks a different language at home; in fact I encourage it. I'd love to see study of a foreign language be a four year requirement in HS--it helps with pattern recognition. Oh, and I was a Romance Language major in college, and possess graduate degrees from Johns Hopkins and the University of Chicago.
Gee, you seem to know all about what those of us right-of-center think. And which one of us is debating from a stance of prejudice and ignorance?
You apparently see very little except for cliches and stereotypes.Learning other languages is bad.
Teaching children more than one language is bad.
Learning science is bad.
Teaching children science is bad.
I see a trend in thought here...
I have a Ph.D., so I guess I agree with you. Oops, did I shatter your stereotype?Learning is never bad.
Well it is a 3 year requirement in most high schools - If you want an advanced diploma.
I know that wasn't the point, but I was just informing you.That wasn't the point of my post. It was celebrating the irony that the person who advanced the argument that all people right-of-center aren't interested in education or other cultures possessed an ignorance and a bigotry beyond measure.
As for HS requirements, it's been a couple of decades since I've checked them. Foreign languages weren't a requirement when I went. If it's changed, that makes me happy.
You apparently see very little except for cliches and stereotypes.
I've studied 3 different languages myself, and would encourage everyone to learn a second language. But that is hardly the point. The point is that there should be an official language in the U.S. to keep us from splintering into a thousand different factions and balkanized states. It's good for immigrants, it's good for the rest of us, and it's good for the entire country.
I have a Ph.D., so I guess I agree with you. Oops, did I shatter your stereotype?
Oh, no, she doesn't have a college degree!! Let's kick her out of the country right now. She couldn't possibly know what she's talking about if she hasn't been to college . . .If that chick has a college degree, I'd be absolutely shocked.
Oh, no, she doesn't have a college degree!! Let's kick her out of the country right now. She couldn't possibly know what she's talking about if she hasn't been to college . . .
Talk about arrogant elitism. You've got it in spades.