Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have traveled to many countries and have always been impressed that the citizens in these countries could speak multiple languages fluently. The US is the only place I have ever been that the people are so stupid and think being fluent in multiple languages is a bad thing.
It isn't a bad thing but people get annoyed when they have to 'press 1' for English. Just curious in your country do you have press 1 for English?
I have immigrant parents, grew up bilingual (English and my family’s Indian language), studied three different languages in high school and college (minored in one) and as an adult still listen to podcasts in French daily and take every opportunity I get to use it. I think learning languages is a great thing and I absolutely agree that all American children should study a foreign language in school.
That said, I agree that English should be the default and official language of the US. I get somewhat annoyed when I have to push 1 for English too.
I spend a lot of time in France and am generally with them on this - you come to another country, it’s on you to make an effort in that country’s language. There shouldn't have to be official efforts to accommodate you (outside of obvious places like airports, etc.). And honestly, I think our society has gotten more fractured over the years in part because of all these efforts to pander to various linguistic, racial, and other identity-based groups. I’m okay with establishing an official language.
I agree. The official language of USA should be Mandarin, the most popular native language in the world.
You agree, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have traveled to many countries and have always been impressed that the citizens in these countries could speak multiple languages fluently. The US is the only place I have ever been that the people are so stupid and think being fluent in multiple languages is a bad thing.
It isn't a bad thing but people get annoyed when they have to 'press 1' for English. Just curious in your country do you have press 1 for English?
I have immigrant parents, grew up bilingual (English and my family’s Indian language), studied three different languages in high school and college (minored in one) and as an adult still listen to podcasts in French daily and take every opportunity I get to use it. I think learning languages is a great thing and I absolutely agree that all American children should study a foreign language in school.
That said, I agree that English should be the default and official language of the US. I get somewhat annoyed when I have to push 1 for English too.
I spend a lot of time in France and am generally with them on this - you come to another country, it’s on you to make an effort in that country’s language. There shouldn't have to be official efforts to accommodate you (outside of obvious places like airports, etc.). And honestly, I think our society has gotten more fractured over the years in part because of all these efforts to pander to various linguistic, racial, and other identity-based groups. I’m okay with establishing an official language.
You poor thing.
Evidently there are a lot of us poor things out there. I didn’t vote for him, but it’s one of the reasons why Trump is in office.
That's not the flex you think it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have traveled to many countries and have always been impressed that the citizens in these countries could speak multiple languages fluently. The US is the only place I have ever been that the people are so stupid and think being fluent in multiple languages is a bad thing.
The part you wrote in bold is misinformation.
The fact is: every American child is required to attend school through the 12th grade (or equivalent), and that included a minimum of TWO YEARS (2 years) of foreign language instruction.
If that’s not enough proof of our national commitment to multilingual education, the requirement today is now THREE YEARS.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t think anyone thinks being able to speak multiple languages is a bad thing. I would love to be able to do this but I am bad at languages.
My only issue adjacent to this is that it is annoying af to go to a store and have the person helping you have no idea what you are trying to say.
Anonymous wrote:Most Americans never leave the United States.. And, as the pp pointed out, are sports obsessed and for some reason don't prioritize learning at all, it's not just languages.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have traveled to many countries and have always been impressed that the citizens in these countries could speak multiple languages fluently. The US is the only place I have ever been that the people are so stupid and think being fluent in multiple languages is a bad thing.
It isn't a bad thing but people get annoyed when they have to 'press 1' for English. Just curious in your country do you have press 1 for English?
I have immigrant parents, grew up bilingual (English and my family’s Indian language), studied three different languages in high school and college (minored in one) and as an adult still listen to podcasts in French daily and take every opportunity I get to use it. I think learning languages is a great thing and I absolutely agree that all American children should study a foreign language in school.
That said, I agree that English should be the default and official language of the US. I get somewhat annoyed when I have to push 1 for English too.
I spend a lot of time in France and am generally with them on this - you come to another country, it’s on you to make an effort in that country’s language. There shouldn't have to be official efforts to accommodate you (outside of obvious places like airports, etc.). And honestly, I think our society has gotten more fractured over the years in part because of all these efforts to pander to various linguistic, racial, and other identity-based groups. I’m okay with establishing an official language.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:English is the language of business so other countries learn it.
Beyond that, there are many cultures in close proximity so of course people will learn more languages. Someone in Belgium or Switzerland will learn French and German. Someone near Montreal will learn French and English, bit maybe not someone in Vancouver.
Everyone in Canada learns and is exposed to French. Literally everything is written in both languages. Staring at the cereal box while eating breakfast? We learn French. Using your skincare products? We learn French. Maybe not enough to become fluent but the entire massive country is exposed to French all day every day.

Anonymous wrote:I have traveled to many countries and have always been impressed that the citizens in these countries could speak multiple languages fluently. The US is the only place I have ever been that the people are so stupid and think being fluent in multiple languages is a bad thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have traveled to many countries and have always been impressed that the citizens in these countries could speak multiple languages fluently. The US is the only place I have ever been that the people are so stupid and think being fluent in multiple languages is a bad thing.
The part you wrote in bold is misinformation.
The fact is: every American child is required to attend school through the 12th grade (or equivalent), and that included a minimum of TWO YEARS (2 years) of foreign language instruction.
If that’s not enough proof of our national commitment to multilingual education, the requirement today is now THREE YEARS.
Meh. 3 years is peanuts.