May. 11th, 2004 13:50
what does it mean?
Please comment on this post before you read anyone else's comments.
This weekend, I saw a bumper sticker that said,
Straight, White, English-Speaking
Proud American
For a moment, I was offended ... then I started thinking of several different possible intentions, meanings, and contexts for this slogan. After a bit of confusion, I settled on curiosity. What does it mean? What did the people who sold it intend for it to convey, and what did the person who put it on their car intend to say by it? I can think of several different possibilities or nuances, and maybe there are more.
So tell me, what do you read in this bumper sticker slogan? And if, like me, you see several possibilities, which one came first, before you thought about it?
This weekend, I saw a bumper sticker that said,
Proud American
For a moment, I was offended ... then I started thinking of several different possible intentions, meanings, and contexts for this slogan. After a bit of confusion, I settled on curiosity. What does it mean? What did the people who sold it intend for it to convey, and what did the person who put it on their car intend to say by it? I can think of several different possibilities or nuances, and maybe there are more.
So tell me, what do you read in this bumper sticker slogan? And if, like me, you see several possibilities, which one came first, before you thought about it?
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i just posted a rather lengthy post about my reaction and what i interpreted from it - if you're interested.
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if i moved to france, i think i'd damn well be expected to be fluent or regret every moment i tried to communicate. as for employment? i'd DAMNED well have a work permit/visa or be on my way to becoming a citizen. i don't think they tolerate folx that try to otherwise get jobs. har.
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should learn english
Overall, though, it's going to come down to availability and motivation in each individual case. I want us to have a common language that most everyone here can understand, but that's never going to happen. I don't know ASL, for example, and there are some ASL speakers who can't learn to speak English, for obvious reasons. There are people with mental/learning disabilities that make it very difficult for them to learn a new language. What about someone who's working 70 hours a week to make a basic living, comes home dead tired every day, and happens to be somewhere where they can get by without speaking English - and can't afford to pay for an English class anyway, even if they had the time? And, of course, there's the new immigrant, who will speak English next year, but doesn't yet. At a casual encounter, you can't tell which of these you're dealing with.
I do think everyone in the US should learn English, but whenever I hear someone say that, even though I agree with the statement itself, it gives me the uncomfortable feeling that they think it's a moral failing to not learn English, and that therefore, those who don't speak English deserve ... something. To be looked down upon, at least. I really don't like that thought.
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