Submitted by so-unobvious t3_120lfzv in Washington
Only 19 out of 50 of the U.S. states don't have an "official language" and Washington is one of them
Submitted by so-unobvious t3_120lfzv in Washington
Only 19 out of 50 of the U.S. states don't have an "official language" and Washington is one of them
So one group can claim superiority over another.
Exactly. One of the basic tenets of fascism is the establishment of an official language.
178 countries have an official language(s) including European, African, North and South American, and Asian nations. I did not realise they were all fascist!
"One of the basic tenets of facism..." It's dangerous territory to venture into, unless your goal is to violate the human rights of others.
I did not realise 178 countries were violating human rights and on the slippery slope to fascism
Lol
Oh look at this long list of "fascist" countries: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_official_languages_by_country_and_territory
Official languages are extremely common. It standardizes the language used in official documents.
Canada has two official languages.
Last I checked Canada wasn’t fascist.
Yes, 2. As in, not 1.
Hope this helps.
Is Denmark a fascist country? It only has one official language.
What about the Dominican Republic? Or Sweden?
I swear, none of you can read- what did my comment say, exactly?
"ONE of the basic tenets of fascism..." One. Along with Powerful and continuing nationalism. Disdain for human rights. Identification of enemies as a unifying cause. Military supremacy. Rampant seismic. Controlled mass media. Obsession with national security. Religion and government laced together. Corporate power protected. Labor power suppressed. Disdain for intellectuals and the arts. Obsession with crime and punishment. Rampant cronyism and corruption. Fraudulent elections.
Of the semi-socialist countries any of you have listed, do any of these descriptions apply to them?
Maybe a more appropriate question- name a country that is embracing all of these concepts.
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The government needs to conduct itself in a language and the laws written by them generally need to have a set language to avoid discrepancies between translations.
That's the excuse, yes.
Early attempts to limit voting rights for minorities that have carried over to today
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…an acknowledgement that WA is a multilingual society, and efforts to limit government’s communications to a single language are seen as attempts to limit government accessibility to non-English speakers.
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Official language? We don’t need no stinking official language!
Neither does the US as a whole.
There's close to 100 different languages spoken in King county alone
Because people in Washington don't talk to each other so we don't bother /s
I feel like having an official language (in the sense that it is a language forced to be used) would be a violation of freedom of speech.
Having an official language as a matter of streamlining operations in the offices of government I don't have a problem with. Although once that is declared I feel like it will encourage people to declare the former. (I Know this is a slippery slope argument)
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I like how most things I see in WA. Documents are either in english, or english and other languages. With more languages available upon request.
This is where the United States is ahead of Canada. Quebec gets away with stuff that would never be allowed in the US due to the First Amendment.
So does the UK, etc.
Look up what a D-Notice is.
If all legal documents/services included alternate translations, how would that impede on freedom of speech? No hate, Genuinely curious.
That isn't what I said.
I feel like most of us English speakers just wish we knew more languages
Chinook wawa should be our unofficial language
Wawa
Yet, the USA doesn’t have an official language. So states having one is moot.
The U.S. should never adopt an "official language" either.
I agree
I think there should be an official language but there should be translation services available to ensure accessibility. I think it should be encouraged to maintain one's culture but to also learn the local culture both. No reason you have to sacrifice one for the other. I like that I can walk outside and hear like 5 or 10 different languages just by going on a walk, but its important to have a basic common language as well. Of course the common language can change over time as is needed if one language becomes the majority spoken.
Official languages are kinda pointless unless you are trying to protect a dying language. While most Americans can barely speak English properly, it is far from a dying language
There isn’t a federally established national language; why would there be one established by individual states?
I’m good with that.
Make it Chinuk Wawa. A multicultural language with heritage right here in the PNW/Washington
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All states have a de facto official language that government business is conducted in and laws are written in, I believe.
Every person I’ve ever met is able to speak English or Spanish. I grew up in central WA, so we never really had Asian/Middle eastern languages spoken. It would have been very cool to meet random Asian/Middle Eastern folks who speak totally different languages than what I’m used to.
I think it would be good if every public school member has to learn greetings in Salish. Fail them out if they can’t pronounce it right.
The official language of Washington State is the tax code.
Do you live in WA?
I lived there until Seattle put a homeless hotel 1/4 mile from my home and being an employee at Boeing Renton got to be barely enough to pay the bills and I figured out that Sound Transit was just another payoff program. And don’t forget about the I-5 interchange in Tacoma. Also they should require all DEMOCRATS to ride the train from Tacoma to Olympia as a trust fall. Oh don’t forget about only going to the movies at the 72nd street theater.
hyrailer t1_jdhyu1y wrote
Why does any state need this?