![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#131
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay Honeck wrote:
Besides, do you know how much it costs to translate the website into Spanish? I resent the government translating the website into babytalk. =That's= where the problem lies. I don't care how much it costs -- *ANY* amount is absurd. If the NWS has so much extra money laying around that they can afford such silly expenditures, I'd say we should get the extra money the FAA craves from their budget. And where do you stop? There are well over 100 languages in the world, and this isn't counting the many dialects around the world. If the government supports Spanish translations, then everyone else will want their favorite language provided. Where do you draw the line? Matt |
#132
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jose wrote:
Um, sorry to burst your bubble, Jose, but Spanish is a foreign language in the United States. Um, sorry to burst your bubble, Jay, but Spanish is not a foreign language in the United States. It is by any reasonable definition of foreign language. What definition are you using? And please provide a reference to the definition from a generally recognized and legitimate source. Not just your own home-grown definition. Matt |
#133
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
C J Campbell wrote:
I think having signs and other government services in Spanish is good for business, good for trade, and good for freedom. It may be good for business, but in the long term it is not good for societal cohesion. This country struggles harder every year to find things to bind together its many factions... a pretty much impossible task. I don't believe it is any good for freedom either. It makes things more complicated and increases the requirements for more government. An why stop at just Spanish? Why print signs in ALL the languages that are spoken in the United States? That would now include everything from Arabic to Polynesian. |
#134
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
C J Campbell wrote:
No, I'm in it for the money. I had my heart surgically removed 30 years ago when I started being a landlord. Didn't need it anymore. I think having signs and other government services in Spanish is good for business, good for trade, and good for freedom. How about Chinese? Japanese? Korean? German? French? Hindu? Matt |
#135
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Matt Whiting wrote:
Where do you draw the line? At the point where the group is so small it has no political influence. That's the reality, not a statement of my preference in all cases. |
#136
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Sylvain wrote:
Jose wrote: I believe it is in English, worldwide. I've never flown in a foreign country, but my understanding is that ATC is supposed to be in English, even for the natives. well, brace yourself for a surprise then when you eventually venture outside... --Sylvain Why, all real countries have ATC who are English capable. France probably being an exception. :-) When I flew into St. Petersburg, the Russian controller's English wasn't great, but I could make out most of it. I think I understood it better though than did the two German pilots of the Lufthansa Airbus in which I was riding jump seat. Matt |
#137
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Sylvain wrote:
mad8 wrote: the citizenship test doesn't require being able to speak english. you can take it in your own language if you pay/provide a translator. bull****. I just went through the process myself (hey, I have been a citizen for almost a month now! :-)) and the only exceptions are for people older than a given age (I don't remember the details, but you can find it all in 8 CFR) -- but I think it is over 65. that said, the level of competency required in English as well as the questions on history/civics were quite disappointing (I had prepared for much harder stuff); keep in mind though that very few natural born and US public school educated citizen would be unable to pass that test. Yes, that is the ultimate irony. Matt |
#138
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
C J Campbell wrote:
An interesting question, at that. How much money are we really talking about here? They have some guy, probably, already on the payroll, or maybe even a computer translator, that translates the site into Spanish. I bet it doesn't cost all that much compared to their whole budget. They probably spend more on wastebaskets every month. Wait until someone who speaks Lithuanian files a lawsuit. |
#139
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ol Shy & Bashful wrote:
On Feb 12, 3:40 pm, "Jay Honeck" wrote: http://www.crh.noaa.gov/forecast/Map...DVN&map.x=121&... (orhttp://tinyurl.com/39s8j5if that URL wraps...) Does anyone else find it disturbing that the National Weather Service in the United States is paying out taxpayer money to a government employee to create a foreign-language web page? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" Jay por supuesto pero yo pienso mas gente en estado unidos falta educacion como otro pieses y lenguas. Esta claro que mas latinos viene aqui y el mundo es cambiando. No cambio o adjustamente por el individual, el es muerte en la agua. Times are changing my friend. I am one of the most adamant in the USA regarding the use of english as our language but I fear I am ****ing in the wind. In most of the foreign countries I worked in, I had to learn at least a modicum of the language to survive. It is indeed unfortunate that our education system, and by extension, most Americans, never learn a foreign language well enough to carry on a simple conversation in anything but english. To that end, I am making an effort to teach my new son several languages while he is still in the early stages of speech development so he'll be able to function in a multi-lingual world. You should have seen me raising hell in a post office in CA where all the signs were in spanish. I made enough of a stink that all the signs were duplicated in english by the end of the week. I guess it beats being in arabic......or Finnish? ggg Just wait. Pretty soon our signs will look like the instruction sheets for most appliances. Three pages of instructions that take 30 pages to print in 10 different languages. Matt |
#140
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mxsmanic wrote:
What really happens is that Spanish speakers who wish to get ahead in the U.S. learn to read, write, and speak English. Those who confine themselves to Spanish live in a large but isolated ghetto and fall prey to hucksters and demagogues who profit from the captive audience created by monolingual Hispanophones to further their own ends. You continue to impress me with your rather accurate grasp of American politics... especially the part about some politicians actually exploiting certain socio-economic groups... sucking up to them and ultimately playing them against others for their own political (and financial) gain. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
aviation weather books | Jose | Piloting | 3 | June 2nd 05 10:43 PM |
Eastern Iowa Big Kids Toy Show in Iowa City this coming weekend | Jay Honeck | Home Built | 0 | May 16th 05 03:27 PM |
Eastern Iowa Big Kids Toy Show in Iowa City this coming weekend | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 0 | May 16th 05 03:27 PM |
Best Aviation Weather Website? | Robert Castro | Piloting | 8 | January 14th 04 11:57 PM |
Iowa Aviation Conference to be held in West Des Moines | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | October 3rd 03 12:12 AM |