Are these the same people who are controlling the weather?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think OP’s mind might be blown by the fact that ballots in Fairfax County are in English, Spanish, Korean, and Vietnamese.
Voting signs and ballots are printed in languages other than English to encourage unlawful voting by noncitizens.
The number of people who fall under the exceptions to the English-language requirement to naturalize (or were born U.S. citizens but never lived in an English-speaking culture long enough to learn the language), are exceedingly minuscule.
Anonymous wrote:I think OP’s mind might be blown by the fact that ballots in Fairfax County are in English, Spanish, Korean, and Vietnamese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many citizens are not fluent enough in English to make a decision like voting. But yea they are citizens and yes they can vote
OP here - sorry, I've never encountered a single fellow US citizen who can't read english (apart from I guess illiterate people).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do not need to know English to become a citizen
Incorrect. You do need to read english to become a citizen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many citizens are not fluent enough in English to make a decision like voting. But yea they are citizens and yes they can vote
OP here - sorry, I've never encountered a single fellow US citizen who can't read english (apart from I guess illiterate people).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Many citizens are not fluent enough in English to make a decision like voting. But yea they are citizens and yes they can vote
OP here - sorry, I've never encountered a single fellow US citizen who can't read english (apart from I guess illiterate people).
Anonymous wrote:You do not need to know English to become a citizen
Anonymous wrote:Many citizens are not fluent enough in English to make a decision like voting. But yea they are citizens and yes they can vote
Anonymous wrote:I was surprised to see the the ballot duplicates all the questions and instructions in spanish. What's the point? You have to be a U.S. citizen to vote, which means you must know the language.
Also - there are scores of languages spoken by citizens in this area. Why spanish?
IMHO, that ballot would be simpler for all if if was just in english.