zeruch
zeruch t1_ithpw4v wrote
Reply to comment by Alyxra in [OC] US counties required to provide non-English ballots under the Voting Rights Act, by number of languages by USAFacts_Official
If we were still in the 1800s, sure. But now? Dollars to donuts, I doubt it.
"Most German immigrants all Americanized their names "
Re-read that. Besides being poorly written, it's also inaccurate. There were period where anglicization was more common, but rarely anywhere near "all". Frankly, it was in cases often for practicality (because Americans can't pronounce anything "weird" which is why for Portuguese, Martin (Mar-teen) became Martin (Mahr-tin), Silveira became Silver, and almost any other "ei" centered surname (Pereira, Ferreira, etc) got given a soft-E instead of a long-A sound. For German, the double-S letter (ß) was dealt away with wholesale, and pronunciations often stayed intact while spelling shifted for practicality (e.g. Bauer became Bower) but hardly hid anything from view.
Also, anglicizing of names is common in the US and England, but historically it was often forced rather than chosen (that doesn't change the anti-immigrant underpinning, but does change the method).
This topic is a lot more complex than you rebutted., and it's one I have a big pet interest in, but I suspect that's not the point you were trying to make (albeit very clumsily). My first sentence still stands. And as for "Americans were notoriously anti-Irish, anti-Italian, anti-German, anti-anything" you've just described almost every spot of humanity on the planet (really, find me a single society anywhere in history, anywhere on the planet that at one time or all didn't have or contrive a convenient "other" to lambaste). But what do I know, I'm just a misanthrope on the internet.
zeruch t1_it60yr1 wrote
Reply to comment by Yarmouk in [OC] US counties required to provide non-English ballots under the Voting Rights Act, by number of languages by USAFacts_Official
They also wouldn't likely complain if it was counties in the upper midwest making Swedish or German ballots.
zeruch t1_it60w9m wrote
Reply to comment by Bloka2au in [OC] US counties required to provide non-English ballots under the Voting Rights Act, by number of languages by USAFacts_Official
...and do what?
zeruch t1_itioagf wrote
Reply to comment by Alyxra in [OC] US counties required to provide non-English ballots under the Voting Rights Act, by number of languages by USAFacts_Official
Nothing passive about it, and clearly you have your own projection to contend with.
Thanks for the passive-moribund admission you have nothing else to contribute.
​
Toodles.