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Originally Posted by akuma English is not my first or second language. I came to the US not knowing english and was totally lost and dependent upon those who could translate for me. I took private ESL classes and the ones given in my elementry school. I put a lot of effort into it. I worked solid for two summers, and afterschool/weekends for a few years. It was well worth the efforts. I cannot imagine immigrating to the US and NOT learning english. It limits the ability to experience life beyond localized ethnic communities. I value my independence, and my independence is directly linked to my ability to communicate with those around me. Learning english in the US gave me great opportunities. I would not want to forget my native language for family and cultural reasons, but english is needed to interact with those beyond my family.
I also know that learning english will help in the US job market. In my family's business in the US, the hispanic warehouse workers who could read/write/speak english were better paid and were always promoted. The ones who only spoke spanish never got more than minimum wage and never advanced.
As for tourists, multi-lingual signs are important, but are not the solution for immigrants who do not make an attempt at learning english. | I agree. my family came over from Nigeria. they began learning english before they left for America. it is the polite thing to do. my grandparents and my mama and papa were very strong believers in this. As the song says, it was a love T.K.O.
Last edited by gonefishin; 09-07-2007 at 10:43 AM.
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