Originally posted by Rapscallion
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"Speak English" sign in Philly restaurant
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Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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This guy has said he has not refused service to anyone based on race. All he is saying is "order in English" so that the order can be understood. The one article or interview my sister was telling me about, he supposedly said that they are a very busy restaurant and he and his staff got tired of holding the line up for 5-7 minutes while whoever was serving had to go through the menu line by line with the customer. They also got tired of the complaints when an order came up wrong.
Also, I have had customers both Asian and Hispanic come up to me and start talking in their native language and get mad when I can't help them.
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I made a thread about this topic on the main boards, and it was civil for the most part... But the Mods rightfully locked it before it could get out of hand. So I'll chime in here...
First things first. I sympathies, truly I do. I understand how hard it is for adult immigrants to learn English. It is a very weird language, and it's difficult to learn ANY second language as an adult... But...
No Official Language or not... English is the most widely spoken language in the country. Movies are produced in English, Television is produced in English. Most news papers and Magazines are English (some have SPECIAL issues in other languages), and our schools are primarily teaching in English. English is as close to being an official language without actually becoming it.
If I ever move to another language, I will be sure to try my best to learn the official, or at least most primarily spoken language... This isn't giving up my culture... It's benefiting my ability to communicate with those around me.
When I worked in Radio Shack, we were in a place where a large percentage of the customers were Spanish Speaking... We had people on the sales floor who spoke Spanish... This would not be a problem...but then you have to realize that Radio Shack is commission based, and Cell Phone sales bring special bonuses.
I really don't like when people say it's about culture and race, cause it's not... It's about communication... Simple as that. If I move to France, I'm gonna learn French, if I move to Japan I'll learn to speak Japanese... Germany German, Mexico Spanish... It's hard I know...But it's just gonna make it easier for everyone involved.
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Except for refugees, noone's forced these people to leave the place where their native language was the dominant language. It's their free choice, and they should accept the consequences.
Refugees, obviously, are a special case. And usually traumatised by whatever they're fleeing from, on top of that. Even so, they'll fit in better in their new home if they learn the language - and whatever happened back home isn't the fault of the locals in their host nation.
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I agree with the courts and the owner. If the shop owner's employees only speak English, ordering in anything but will cause a problem.
I agree with Seshat and Will-mun, English is the most widely used language in the US. While no "official" US language exists, English is the language that pretty much all business is conducted in, as well as the language of 99% of the signs in this country.
I made a post in the main board a while back about a customer that spoke to me in Spanish after I told him several times that I didn't speak it. My job doesn't require me to speak anything BUT English, why should the employees of a sandwich shop be required to? Are they paid a wage that reflects completing a college course in foreign tongues? I seriously doubt it.
If I went to Mexico and spoke only English, I wouldn't get far. Same with most other countries that have adopted an official language other than English. What is with the bullshit line of thought here that says any language is acceptable? The sandwich shop in Philly is not any different than any other business, the owner just had the brass balls to make a policy about it.
EDIT: When you consider how many tourists go to Philly and that this shop has been in the national news, I think this shop's business will be huge for months to come.Last edited by Jadedcarguy; 03-24-2008, 07:46 AM.
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Originally posted by CancelMyService View PostBesides, the places were Spanish is spoken the most in the US (Florida, Texas, California) were speaking it before English came around anyway.
Now, I've had people come up to me speaking Spanish and getting mad at me for not speaking it. I have very fair skin, naturally curly dark brown hair & brown eyes. They assume I'm Hispanic. (And you know what assuming makes you, right? ) I am Spaniard (Great-grandmother's maiden name was Cardinez - she had 2 sisters who were disowned because they married Mexicans and the Spaniards aren't supposed to dirty themselves with those below their station - not my way of thinking, but the way of the Spaniards in 1800 and 1900's so please don't flame me).
With my dark hair & eyes, I've been told I look Italian and (Southern) German too. But I haven't had Italians or Germans speak to me in their native tongue. (Okay, I haven't had any of them come into the store, but just on the off chance ... )
I know I'm rambling, but the point I have is this: Please, if you want decent/good service at any place you're at in America (or Europe or even Pluto for that matter), learn the language that is the one that is dominantly spoken. I've seen places that have signs that say "Menus in Spanish" or "We speak Spanish here" - then those are places you can speak Spanish at, but don't assume all places speak Spanish. Please, learn English.
Thank you.Oh Holy Trinity, the Goddess Caffeine'Na, the Great Cowthulhu, & The Doctor, Who Art in Tardis, give me strength. Moo. Moo. Java. Timey Wimey
Avatar says: DAVID TENNANT More Evidence God is a Woman
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Originally posted by IDrinkaRum View PostThe Spanish in Florida/California/Texas was Spanish spoken in Spain not from Mexico. The Spanish from Spain is a different animal altogether from the Spanish in Latin/South America.
Where else do you suppose it came from?
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Originally posted by Boozy View PostThen you may be surprised to learn that the Spanish spoken in Mexico is also "Spanish from Spain."
Where else do you suppose it came from?
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There are several differences between Spanish spoken in Spain and Spanish in South America.
One, you rarely see the vosotros (formal for y'all) form of verbs used in South America. It is used regularly in Spain.
The other major difference is that because of the Hapsburg empire, Spaniards lisp (The rulers who had Hapsburg chins had a speech impediment that made them lisp, so everyone else lisped too so the royals wouldn't be miffed. It seems to have stuck) while South Americans do not.
Some slang is different, too, much like Kings' English and American English differ.
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Boozy - Mysty & AFP both said it a little better than me about the Spanish in Spain and the "New World".
As I mentioned briefly in my earlier post, my college Spanish teacher came from Spain. We had 2 girls from Argentina. I remember the first day in the class. The girls were like, "We're going to be sailing through this class! We already speak Spanish, this will be an easy grade for us. In high school, we were tutors for the rest of the class because we're native speakers."
A couple of weeks later, the teacher was correcting one of the Argentinian girl's speech when she got into a screaming match with the woman. The girl was like, "Why do you keep correcting me? I speak Spanish, just like you!"
The teacher's reaction was like, "No you do not. I speak the correct form of Spanish. You speak a garbled form of Spanish. I'm teaching you the proper way because you don't know."
That exchange opened my eyes. I've talked to people who are from Spain and from Latin/South America and their attitudes are very different. The Latin/South Americans lay claim to their Spanish heritage. The ones from Spain say they are the true Spanish & those from the "New World" aren't really Spanish and should give up the charade.Oh Holy Trinity, the Goddess Caffeine'Na, the Great Cowthulhu, & The Doctor, Who Art in Tardis, give me strength. Moo. Moo. Java. Timey Wimey
Avatar says: DAVID TENNANT More Evidence God is a Woman
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As someone who learned to speak French under a Quebecois teacher, and was then ridiculed by a Frenchman for my "bastardized" use of his language, I totally understand the differences between old world and new world language.
My point was just that they didn't speak Spanish in Mexico until Spain colonized, just as they didn't speak French in what is now Quebec until France colonized. The languages then started to diverge at that point.
I do wonder why you felt the need to differentiate between "Spanish from Spain" and Spanish from Mexico, however. If the issue is expediting communication between English speakers and non-English speakers, why does it matter what form of Spanish they are speaking?
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It just stuck in my craw - like when people say we speak English in America, but it's really American we speak. I don't know ... I'm just weird I suppose.
As for learning American/English/Whatever language of the country you're in, it's a good idea. No matter what. France does have a national language and isn't it a requirement that to visit the country, you have to have at least the bare bones understanding of the language? I don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing, but in my imagination, I'm sure it makes things easier for everyone around - those who are visiting who might be lost or hungry or whatever can communicate (with probably some pantomiming) to get their point across and not have to go through 50 people before they find someone who can understand them.
But to the OP, I have no problem with the Speak English sign. It does make everyone's life easier when everyone is on the same page, especially when there are hungry people involved.Oh Holy Trinity, the Goddess Caffeine'Na, the Great Cowthulhu, & The Doctor, Who Art in Tardis, give me strength. Moo. Moo. Java. Timey Wimey
Avatar says: DAVID TENNANT More Evidence God is a Woman
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Originally posted by Boozy View PostI do wonder why you felt the need to differentiate between "Spanish from Spain" and Spanish from Mexico, however. If the issue is expediting communication between English speakers and non-English speakers, why does it matter what form of Spanish they are speaking?Violence has resolved more conflicts than anything else. The contrary opinion that violence doesn't solve anything is merely wishful thinking at its worst. - Starship Troopers
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Greenday - that too ... I think I'm just going to stop talking about schtuff now.
When I worked in fast food, I had a chick come up to me, speak Spanish at me, and when I looked at her in confusion, she paused and asked, "You mean you're not Mexican?"* I said "no". Then she didn't want me taking her order. The assistant manager who came from Peru or Chile (I can't remember, we had quite a few managers/employees from various parts of South America) and did speak Spanish, had to take her order.
*When the chick asked me if I was Mexican, she asked in perfect, unaccented English (which for me means she sounded like any ol' American off the street).Oh Holy Trinity, the Goddess Caffeine'Na, the Great Cowthulhu, & The Doctor, Who Art in Tardis, give me strength. Moo. Moo. Java. Timey Wimey
Avatar says: DAVID TENNANT More Evidence God is a Woman
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Difference in locale...
I used to live in S. California. I remember people getting LOUDLY upset that I didn't speak Spanish, and being cussed at becouse of it. ( I can understand that much). People would also get upset if we didn't have someone there who spole Spanish. One of my coworkers, who was Hispanic by birth, would get yelled at for not knowing Spanish, and "not respecting her heritage". Occasionally, we would get the same behavior from people speaking Vietnamese. Not as often, but it would still happen. And I lost count of the number of times I saw a five or six year old translating for mom, dad or grandparent.
Here on the other hand, I am shocked that I can assume that people understand me when I speak. ( and am occasionally amused when someone spells Pantoja or Figueroa for me). I can understand how the business owner feels. I had gotten very used to everyone automatically assuming I spoke Spanish because I lived in S. California. ( I am bilingual, I just speak French, not Spanish. Not that high school or college Spanish would have helped me, they teach Castilian, not "New World" Spanish. I have been assured by a friend of mine from Europe that they are very differnet dialects, almost akin to English and Cajun, or Ebonics.)
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