^^ Um. . . yeah, many Europeans learn English in school because (1) they are required to and (2) they want to be able to communicate with people from some other EU countries and people from the world's only superpower: the United States of America, which is well over eighty percent in English-speaking people.[Edited on May 13, 2008 at 8:04 AM. Reason : .]
5/13/2008 8:03:20 AM
We should return to 16th-century spelling standards. For example:
5/13/2008 10:56:29 AM
word up
5/14/2008 8:22:59 AM
Obama Tells Audience, "You Need to Make Sure that Your Child Can Speak Spanish"
7/9/2008 9:25:02 PM
a) Context, for crying out loud.b) How is that even elitist? They just enjoy throwing that word around, apparently.
7/9/2008 11:22:34 PM
Of all the things we NEED to make sure our children learn and are failing to do.. speaking spanish should be pretty fucking far down the list.
7/9/2008 11:27:42 PM
Context
7/9/2008 11:29:04 PM
Calling for context is elitist.
7/9/2008 11:33:10 PM
That we don't expect our kids to be able to learn a second language, or that it would occur at the expense of other skills is sadly symptomatic of the malaise sweeping our middle classes. It's not elitist to learn a second language in a global economy, it's a survival instinct.
7/10/2008 12:07:43 AM
Isn't forcing kids to learn a second language from an early age something that yuppies from both side of the fence do nowadays? Because of the obvious cognitive skills these kids will develop over their peers(In other words, it's something that, when given the resources, people will rationally choose to do anyway).[Edited on July 10, 2008 at 12:24 AM. Reason : .]
7/10/2008 12:20:43 AM
america is falling behind the rest of the world in just about every educational metric available.so... isolating ourselves and becoming protectionist is a sure fire way to guarantee our future success
7/10/2008 1:23:28 AM
Why not Mandarin?
7/10/2008 1:42:05 AM
Um. . .there are a lot of, you know, countries and stuff in Europe--not to mention, you know, the rest of the world and all. How many languages should we "force" our kids to learn--it's a legitimate question, right?And here's a thought: If, you know, so many Spanish-speaking immigrants weren't entering our country illegally, maybe. . .um. . .the need to learn Spanish would be a choice and not forced upon us? And, you know, how about people coming here just learning to speak English? It might work.
7/10/2008 2:02:59 AM
7/10/2008 2:24:23 AM
7/10/2008 2:44:20 AM
^But you didn't address my point that it's actually not very reasonable to expect low-income, first-generation people coming here to learn English fluently (or even very well). The people who don't speak English well aren't affluent immigrants, they're those whom I described above. The second-generation _does_ learn to speak English. That's self-evident for anyone who's been to, I dunno, California ...I just take the argument a step further and say that _bi-lingual_ education is a net positive for our society, regardless of which language is the second one. I didn't say anything about mono-lingual education in some language other than English.
7/10/2008 2:54:27 AM
^ If people are coming here illegally, they aren't supposed to be here anyway. Frankly, I do expect anyone who's coming here to live--regardless of economic status--to do whatever is necessary to learn the English language well enough to conduct day-to-day affairs.I, too, support multilingual education--but not forced foreign language education for English-speaking Americans as part of some PC indoctrination campaign. I think there's quite a difference between the two.In any event, English will undoubtedly be made the official language here soon--it's well overdue. And we can stop this charade.
7/10/2008 3:03:06 AM
7/10/2008 3:11:09 AM
^^Well you can expect it all day long but the fact remains that people ARE going to come here illegally, they ARE NOT going to learn English, and there's a practical problem to be solved. I'm not really interested in a long discussion on how to bend the laws of Physics to some theoretical parallel universe where there are no illegal immigrants. You can expect, expect, expect but the question you haven't answered is HOW do they actually learn the language?As for PC indoctrination -- I'm not sure why we're getting into label politics here. I made quite a conservative, capitalist case for multi-lingual education; the first being that we waste a lot of money teaching kids foreign languages they have no chance of learning, the second being that language skills are simply necessary for a global economy.And in addition to that I would say that, from a conservative perspective, the federal government has no authority to dictate what language people should speak from on high. More so doing it is wasteful as it impedes the obvious and necessary reforms I described above.[Edited on July 10, 2008 at 3:18 AM. Reason : foo]
7/10/2008 3:18:15 AM
7/10/2008 3:41:30 AM
^Well, I don't think there's much point in continuing the debate on securing borders here. I personally think it's a pie-in-the-sky political fantasy to believe we'll stop illegal immigration in any meaningful way. But there's no point in going further here.As to the politics of the official language -- I'm just concerned about this little thing we have called the Constitution which very sensibly instituted federalism to deal with issues like this. If you're not, fine -- no point in continuing the discussion.And where grammar is concerned -- well, also not to be nasty, I pay for a monthly subscription to the full Oxford English Dictionary which is the current definitive guide to the English language and it tells me the hyphen is A-OK. For example in the entry for "bilingual" it demonstrates the following usage:"1955 T. H. PEAR Eng. Social Diff. iii. 97 In London, many waitresses and shop assistants are bi-lingual."In the general entry on the MULTI- form (as in multi-lingual) it shows many examples of usage for words with the prefix where the hyphen is omitted or not.I agree it's not "necessary" but think the usage is almost certainly a matter of stylistic preference. Not unlike what language one speaks. [Edited on July 10, 2008 at 3:56 AM. Reason : foo]
7/10/2008 3:56:07 AM
^ Fair enough. Shall we call it a draw for now?
7/10/2008 3:59:19 AM
As long as we don't curtail long run economic growth, by say restricting immigration, we are moving steadily towards a time when every single human being on earth will speak English.As long as the US remains the worlds most powerful capital center, international business will be in English. So long as we have the most advanced education institutions, English with be the language of the technorati. Those two things virtually assure that it will evolve into the universal language.Though I think it is likely to loose its Victorian rigidity on spelling and grammar.[Edited on July 11, 2008 at 12:40 PM. Reason : .]
7/11/2008 12:38:55 PM
Where are we going to find the labor to build a wall between us and Mexico? That's right, Mexico.
7/11/2008 12:43:01 PM