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This Makes Me Happy, Part 2

I for one hope that Americans keep being arrogant.

My kids are going to learn at least English and Spanish. How much more valuable would you be to the work force if you spoke Chinese fluently? How many more options could you have if you spoke Spanish or Portuguese fluently today?
 
My kids are going to learn at least English and Spanish. How much more valuable would you be to the work force if you spoke Chinese fluently? How many more options could you have if you spoke Spanish or Portuguese fluently today?

I agree 100% and have my kids enrolled in Chinese classes. That being said, wouldn't it benefit Mexican immigrants just as much to learn English? People such as NAOS would have you believe that I'm a 'tard for believing such. If it's good for the goose it's good for the gander.
 
I know that being able to speak german hasn't done diddly for me.
 
When I went on my mission, nobody thought it was okay for me to speak English after I'd been there only a couple months. In my opinion, if you're going to live in a country, learn the freaking language. Anybody who puts in half an effort will pick up enough to at least be passable after a couple years.
I do agree that it probably doesn't help the immigrant's cause that he had to speak through an interpreter.

I agree with this. I had a neihbor who lived next to me for 8 years. I could never talk to her because she did not know english. I could talk to her kids though. I will never understand living somewhere and not learning to communicate in the main language of the people. If I moved to a country I would make a point of trying to learn the language of that country.
 
But if all you did was hang out with other Americans, patronize only English speaking establishments and otherwise ignore the culture of the country you were in you wouldn't need to learn Spanish. That's exactly what many of the Mexican immigrants do. They have such a strong support system in the US, including the US government and US businesses dying for their pes, er, dollars that they have no need to learn even a speck of English.

I won't even respond to the point you are making, because others have addressed that, and it is a valid point. The way you phrase it however and saying "pes, er, dollars" is borderline being intentionally derogatory. Yes, the peso is the currency used in Mexico, and the man was originally from Mexico, but the use of this phrase suggested that is a bad thing. In summary, stop being racist, and your point might come across as more sincere instead of as a token disguise for your xenophobia.
 
I won't even respond to the point you are making, because others have addressed that, and it is a valid point. The way you phrase it however and saying "pes, er, dollars" is borderline being intentionally derogatory. Yes, the peso is the currency used in Mexico, and the man was originally from Mexico, but the use of this phrase suggested that is a bad thing. In summary, stop being racist, and your point might come across as more sincere instead of as a token disguise for your xenophobia.

but racism lurks at the foundation of his point. It also serves as the mortar between the bricks. How can he take it out without fear of the whole thing toppling down?
 
Indoctrination?

this is classic. FEAR KNOWLEDGE MOTHA ****er!

Actually, my job is to get students to use their own voice in research and writing, to think independently, to fashion research questions and understand the ethics involved in the way the question is posed. The really interesting thing about this job, I've found, is that nobody ends up repetitively repeating the positions that you espouse. Isn't that just cRaZY? I think they realize that it's boring to be predictable, and that the world is far more complex and interesting than that.
 
I won't even respond to the point you are making, because others have addressed that, and it is a valid point. The way you phrase it however and saying "pes, er, dollars" is borderline being intentionally derogatory. Yes, the peso is the currency used in Mexico, and the man was originally from Mexico, but the use of this phrase suggested that is a bad thing. In summary, stop being racist, and your point might come across as more sincere instead of as a token disguise for your xenophobia.
but racism lurks at the foundation of his point. It also serves as the mortar between the bricks. How can he take it out without fear of the whole thing toppling down?

sincere question here, I know xenophobia and racism are not the same thing, but I'm not sure I could explain the difference. I know racism technically deals with race - does it also deal with ethnicity, or is xenophobia the equivalent of racism but based upon ethnicity? Or something else entirely?


this is classic. FEAR KNOWLEDGE MOTHA ****er!

Actually, my job is to get students to use their own voice in research and writing, to think independently, to fashion research questions and understand the ethics involved in the way the question is posed. The really interesting thing about this job, I've found, is that nobody ends up repetitively repeating the positions that you espouse. Isn't that just cRaZY? I think they realize that it's boring to be predictable, and that the world is far more complex and interesting than that.

LOL, in quoting your post, I realize you worked REALLY HARD to spell out CRAZY!!! Props for the effort :-)

Just curious, what subject do you teach and at what age level? It's good stuff that some schools/curricula just don't emphasize enough these days.
 
Xenophobia can deal with nationality, politics, culture, etc. Essentially it is fear of people who live differently than you do.
 
I'm all for learning Spanish, just because the opportunity abounds. You really always need to learn the language around native speakers for a time, or else you'll sound like the Japanese students that try to speak English based on what they tried to learn from their textbooks - it's not pretty. And basically anywhere in the Western US, for better or worse, you have plenty of opportunities to speak/hear it the second you step out of your door, so why not?

Most people don't learn languages to converse or for fun however. There are usually economic reasons for that. Comparing the linguistic behaviors of an economic giant's populace to countries that couldn't survive healthily unless they adapted linguistic abilities is ludicrous. You're not going to find people that speak your language in Japan or China very often for the same reasons. Again, the young Japanese are taught English, but you can barely find one to speak it with. They don't need to. Both English speaking only, and others who have come to America that don't know any other languages beyond where they are from probably don't see a reason. If you were living in a **** slum in Mexico and were able to come to America, get a job, live in a good apartment, and live a functioning social life in a Hispanic enclave somewhere, you probably wouldn't bother either. Just because the social engineers in this country are trying to create American balkanization by leaving the borders basically wide open and allowing enclaves to grow beyond all control, doesn't mean it's a good thing for the rest of us. There has to be an assimilation process somewhere because language barriers more than anything else allows that divide to grow. It's going to be a huge issue down the road.

I just spent a week in Imperial Beach, CA. Border beach town to Mexico. Nice place, solid surfing, but I wouldn't live there because 90% of the people don't speak English and don't have any clue about anything related to America. I speak Spanish, so I was okay, but that shouldn't be the case in any town in America.
 
sincere question here, I know xenophobia and racism are not the same thing, but I'm not sure I could explain the difference. I know racism technically deals with race - does it also deal with ethnicity, or is xenophobia the equivalent of racism but based upon ethnicity? Or something else entirely?




LOL, in quoting your post, I realize you worked REALLY HARD to spell out CRAZY!!! Props for the effort :-)

Just curious, what subject do you teach and at what age level? It's good stuff that some schools/curricula just don't emphasize enough these days.

I teach sociocultural anthropology at the university level. I also lecture in an undergraduate core sequence on modern global history, from Columbus to the present.
 
I just don't believe the theory that every single person can learn a language totally fluently if they live in a place even for 20 or so years if they came here as an adult. I've been trying to teach my dad computers for 10 or so years with no luck. Conversely, he's been trying to teach me carpentry for the same amount of time and I still suck at it. To me the concept that language can be extremely difficult for people to learn isn't exactly a foreign one (pun intended!).
 
I just don't believe the theory that every single person can learn a language totally fluently if they live in a place even for 20 or so years if they came here as an adult. I've been trying to teach my dad computers for 10 or so years with no luck. Conversely, he's been trying to teach me carpentry for the same amount of time and I still suck at it. To me the concept that language can be extremely difficult for people to learn isn't exactly a foreign one (pun intended!).

I can totally agree that some will struggle much more than others. I knew missionaries who struggled with Spanish after the two years. But I still maintain that if it's something you immerse yourself in, you'll at least be passable at it. If you worked at carpentry every day for 20 years, you'd probably at least be able to make a house stand up. It might not be the best built house, but it would stand. I honestly think that if I were to decide to move to Japan tomorrow and spent 20 years there, giving an effort, I'd at least be able to speak passable Japanese.
 
I won't even respond to the point you are making, because others have addressed that, and it is a valid point. The way you phrase it however and saying "pes, er, dollars" is borderline being intentionally derogatory. Yes, the peso is the currency used in Mexico, and the man was originally from Mexico, but the use of this phrase suggested that is a bad thing. In summary, stop being racist, and your point might come across as more sincere instead of as a token disguise for your xenophobia.

but racism lurks at the foundation of his point. It also serves as the mortar between the bricks. How can he take it out without fear of the whole thing toppling down?

You guys crack me up.
 
I'm still confused as to how saying that somebody living in America for 23 years should be able to speak fluent english is racist. Can somebody explain that to me?

Would you live in a foreign country for 20+ years and still only speak your native language? Because that is just ridiculous and a lack of respect for the country and the culture that you reside in.
 
I think anyone who wants to build a life here should learn english.

But not to accommodate me. To make life easier, and possibly create opportunities for themselves. My life is not any harder because of immigrants that don't speak english.
 
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