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In reply to the discussion: Would a national language be unifying / disunifying? [View all]LanternWaste
(37,748 posts)28. US is certainly not unique in number of languages or cultures... even amonf large nations.
"On the other hand, the US seems to be unique in it's large swaths of various cultures, languages, etc...."
There are many, many other cultures which have the same amount, if not more languages commonly spoken within their borders, e.g., China, South Africa, India, etc. of which, some are more unified in culture and some less. Therefore it seems that language is, at best, merely a small portion among many of national unity and nationalism.
I would however, greatly entertain any valid (non-spurious) correlations you may present to us re: unity of nation as built in part by language, and more so, precisely why one may covet unity on a national scale. It seem, at best, irrelevant...
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Having a national language does not eliminate the ability to be multi-lingual. nt
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#4
Oh, really - try telling that to us German descendant who were forced to stop speaking it. As to
jwirr
Jan 2012
#99
There was no law but in case you did not know it there was great pressure from non-Germans in this
jwirr
Jan 2012
#105
And my grandparents would not let the kids speak anything but English in household
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#106
There is a lot of regionalism and conflict in India surrounding ethic differences.
limpyhobbler
Jan 2012
#114
And the question is whether moving to a more homogenous society, is good/bad/neutral.
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#9
That's because they were xenophobic isolationists until relatively recently. (nt)
jeff47
Jan 2012
#27
It would seem that our citizens have a responsibility to speak the de facto language.
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#11
Still not sure what I missed. You made a quote and I thought you were quoting me.
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#91
that seems to be saying that people should not speak other languages, either at home, or in public.
niyad
Jan 2012
#22
that is certainly what it sounds like. english is the de facto language of this country--why this
niyad
Jan 2012
#35
I would hope that language testing would be sufficient in grade school.
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#45
And yet Germany is a place I would like to live, but for a whole host of other reasons.
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#79
really? and just who would be the ones deeming it necessary? who do you envision being the
niyad
Jan 2012
#33
I'm actually starting to wonder that myself, I think as long as there is sufficient language testing
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#44
Most. But I have seen signs that say things like "open manhole cover" and "highway ends in 1/4 mile"
Snake Alchemist
Jan 2012
#50
US is certainly not unique in number of languages or cultures... even amonf large nations.
LanternWaste
Jan 2012
#28
We are devolving into a nation of losely affiliated regions. The language issue is cursory
Romulox
Jan 2012
#37
We already have one. Profanity. Popular with all and extremely useful when talking politics.
Tierra_y_Libertad
Jan 2012
#68
As a practical matter, declaring a national language, would make no difference in the real world,
trackfan
Jan 2012
#70
Declaring a national language means government documents and forms will only be in that language
jeff47
Jan 2012
#83
America's not that unique in its diversity--Brazil, Mexico, Indonesia, India
Bruce Wayne
Jan 2012
#74
No they didn't. Definitely. They spoke varying different Native American tongues.
vaberella
Jan 2012
#93
This push for English to be a national language is nothing more than right-wing nationalism.
white_wolf
Jan 2012
#112