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English: The Vanishing Language
Human Events ^ | August 25 2006 | Michael Reagan

Posted on 08/26/2006 9:30:40 AM PDT by Reagan Man

All across the U.S., hordes of immigrants -- legal and illegal -- are chattering away in their native language and have no intention of learning English -- the all-but-official language of the United States where they now live.

Can you blame them? They are being enabled by all those diversity fanatics to defy the age-old custom of immigrants to our shores who made it one of their first priorities to learn to speak English and to teach their offspring to do likewise.

It was a case of sink or swim. If you couldn’t speak English you couldn’t get by, go to school, get a job, or become a citizen and vote.

Nowadays we kowtow to demands that everything from ballots to official documents be presented in many native languages as well as in English.

The result? According to Census Bureau statistics reported in HUMAN EVENTS:

* In California, 42.3 percent of the people do not speak English at home. More than 28 percent speak Spanish instead. One in five Californians told the Census Bureau they speak English “less than very well.”

* In the city of Los Angeles, for example, 60.8 percent of the people do not speak English at home. Instead, more than 44 percent speak Spanish while 31.3 percent say they speak English “less than very well.”

* In the city of Santa Ana, a whopping 84.7 percent do not speak English at home while more than 75 percent speak Spanish instead, and 50.8 percent say they speak English “less than very well.”

* In Miami, Florida, 78.9 percent do not speak English at home, 69.8 percent speak Spanish instead, and 46.7 percent say they speak English “less than very well.”

* In Passaic, N.J., 72.7 percent of the people do not speak English at home, 62.9 percent speak Spanish instead, and 45.4 percent say they speak English “less than very well.”

* The 10 states with the greatest percentage of people five years and over who speak a language other than English at home are: 1. California: 42.3 percent; 2. New Mexico: 36.1 percent; 3. Texas: 33.6 percent; 4. New York: 28.2 percent; 5. Arizona: 27.4 percent; 5. (tie) New Jersey: 27.4 percent; 7. Nevada: 26.2 percent; 8. Florida: 25.4 percent; 9. Hawaii: 24 percent; 10. Illinois: 21.5 percent.

Where is all this leading? The other day I read a story headlined “Will English Survive Immigrant Flood?” As Pat Buchanan warns in his new book, “State of Emergency – Third World Invasion and Conquest of America,” if our language is gone, the conquest is complete.

What holds the country together is the commonality of language. When the Census Bureau released its American Community Survey they revealed that the U.S. continues to be inundated by a flood of immigrants, both legal and illegal. And the question this raises is are they learning out language, are they assimilating into our culture? The statistics cited above say the answer is a resounding “NO.”

Last year one in five people in Washington D.C. were immigrants, compared to one in six in 2000. According to The Washington Post, the city is one of eight U.S. metropolitan areas -- along with New York, Los Angeles, Miami, Chicago, San Francisco, Houston and Dallas -- that have at least a million immigrants each.

Shockingly, a large segment of this rising population of immigrants does not speak English at home and does not intend to.

Incredibly, while huge numbers of immigrants already here refuse to learn English, in other parts of the world people are learning English just so they can come here. As I heard last year in Kenya, the students there said that English is the language of business and to get ahead in this world you have to learn to speak it.

We are really enabling immigrants to avoid learning English and assimilating into our culture because we give them everything they need so they don’t have to learn to speak English or become part of the traditional melting pot.

By enabling these people, we build an enclave for them that looks just like what they ran away from at home, thereby preventing them from assimilating and becoming part of the American dream. English is the language of business and trade -- if you can’t speak it you can’t get out of the occupational ghetto and move up the ladder. You are stuck where you are.

Tragically, the answer to the question of English surviving the immigrant invasion is probably “no.” The English language is on its death bed, a victim of the enablers.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: borders; culture; language
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To: aft_lizard

"My Grandma spoke Swedish at home until her death."

Of course, we all remember the great illegal invasion horde of Swedes.

Here's hoping you don't think you made a point.


61 posted on 08/26/2006 7:46:10 PM PDT by John Robertson (Even if we disagree now, we may agree later. Or vice versa.)
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To: Zeroisanumber
This piece strikes me as alarmist. Immigrant groups have always retained their own language through the first generation or two.

You don't grasp the enormity where the flood of illegals is concerned ...it's estimated approximately one million illegals are infiltrating our southern border annually ... Ellis Island opened on January 1, 1892, and became the nation's first federal immigration station. In operation until 1954 (62 years), the station processed over 12 million (legal) immigrant steamship passengers.

62 posted on 08/26/2006 8:36:53 PM PDT by BluH2o
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To: Reagan Man

Although every American and immigrant should be fluent in English--and should use it outside the house--even one and a half centuries ago many immigrants used their native language in the home. The second generation, however, should use English at home. Yet, today, German is the most common nonEnglish language in the United States although the bulk of German immigration was around a century ago.


63 posted on 08/26/2006 10:21:23 PM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu ( http://www.answersingenesis.org)
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To: Jedi Master Pikachu
Any source for that German language statistic? More used at home than Spanish???
64 posted on 08/26/2006 10:28:49 PM PDT by RodgerD (Reject the Democrat's Migration Explosion Act of 2006. No to 70 million new third-world aliens.)
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To: BluH2o
And what was the population of the country at the time? Proportionally, the amount of immigrants to natives is a little more today, but not by all that much.

However, immigrants today tend to be concentrated in a few countries; early waves were comparably about as large, but were divided among many nationalities: German, Swedish, French, Chinese, Greek, Japanese, Filipino, Italian, Irish, etc.

65 posted on 08/26/2006 10:42:14 PM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu ( http://www.answersingenesis.org)
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To: RodgerD
After Spanish, sorry. German is the second most common nonEnglish language in use in the United States.
66 posted on 08/26/2006 10:44:17 PM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu ( http://www.answersingenesis.org)
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To: Jedi Master Pikachu

I'm guessing it's a rather distant second.


67 posted on 08/26/2006 11:08:48 PM PDT by RodgerD (Reject the Democrat's Migration Explosion Act of 2006. No to 70 million new third-world aliens.)
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To: IronJack

I applied for the LAPD back in 1996 and the reason I know that I was not hired is because I was North Carolina and really never dealt with people of other races or their languge. I knew limited spanish growing up in San Antonio where they taught it from Kindergarten but that was it.
I was turned down for a 5 1 Korean woman who wore a skirt that you could tell her religion instead of me.


68 posted on 08/26/2006 11:20:56 PM PDT by lndrvr1972
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To: RodgerD

Probably, but the ethnic group has been in the United States for some time. Many German immigrants moved to sparsely populated areas of the country, such as in the midwest and great plains, and continued their culture and language (in comparison to the Irish, who tended to stay in big cities, and still made some impact.


69 posted on 08/26/2006 11:26:20 PM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu ( http://www.answersingenesis.org)
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To: MineralMan

What people speak at home is their business, but not learning the host country's language is irresponsible. Police, firefighters and doctors, just to name a few, can do their jobs better when communication is as clear as possible.

My Italian told his family that they were in America and they would speak English only; the Italian work ethic was too strong to do otherwise, particularly during the Depression. Besides, with all the other nationalities around, the immigrants needed a common language to communicate with each other and English filled the bill for both social and non-social purposes.


70 posted on 08/26/2006 11:49:00 PM PDT by skr (We cannot play innocents abroad in a world that is not innocent.-- Ronald Reagan)
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To: Jedi Master Pikachu
And what was the population of the country at the time? Proportionally, the amount of immigrants to natives is a little more today, but not by all that much.

The population of the U.S. today is estimated to be 298.5 million. The population of the U.S.leading up to WWI was estimated to be around 100 million.
Hispanics today out number blacks, who make up 14% of the population ... it's thought that their numbers (Hispanics) come in at around 18% ... a good portion of that growth occurring in the last 20 years. With a million Spanish speaking Hispanic types surging illegally across our borders annually ... it won't be long before their numbers will exceed first 20% then 25% of the U.S. population. Concentrating those numbers mostly in the Southwest U.S. the demographics will reflect a Hispanic majority in that region (easily) within the next 20 years. The illegal immigration faucet needs to be turned off now.

71 posted on 08/27/2006 4:56:37 AM PDT by BluH2o
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To: BluH2o
Illegal immigration should indeed come full stop, but as for your percentages, there could be some exaggerations. The Latino percentage is around 15 or 16%, not 18%, and this includes those--particularly in the border states--people of Latin American descent whose ancestors have been in the United States for a long time, including some whose families were there before the Mexican-American War.

Also, Americans of European descent are predicted to remain over half the population until around 2050, and even then the people group will have the plurality in the United States.

72 posted on 08/27/2006 6:02:38 AM PDT by Jedi Master Pikachu ( http://www.answersingenesis.org)
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To: Jedi Master Pikachu
Also, Americans of European descent are predicted to remain over half the population until around 2050, and even then the people group will have the plurality in the United States.

Again, the main area of concern, in terms of demographics, is the Southwestern region of this country. Proportionally Hispanics, at the current level of illegal immigration ... will easily exceed 50% of the population in that area by 2050, probably sooner. To get some idea look at Miami and what has happened there ... not only Cubans arriving after Castro came to power in 1958 and since, but the influx of people from the islands in the greater Caribbean and from south and central America ... Miami's English speaking European extraction population has dwindled to definite minority status.

73 posted on 08/27/2006 7:42:58 AM PDT by BluH2o
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To: IronJack

English is in no danger of being replaced or dying so long as it is use, and that means in written form and so dominant that it continues to flood the planet. Scientific papers are still written in German or French now and then, but English is preferred by far. Literature needs to be produced in English, and maybe there is some weakening in that area. There is some fine modern Spanish literature out there, especially from Latin America. I have no idea what literature is coming out of China, but it is hobbled no doubt by censorship.


74 posted on 08/27/2006 7:49:06 AM PDT by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: bannie

It's a start. It shouldn't end with gradeschool, but unfortunately it often does. High school graduates have about a 20,000 word vocabulary and there it stays for many. College graduates are about 100,000, and it may tend to increase in career specializations. It should continue to increase over a lifetime, but few actually work at it. Opening a dictionary shouldn't be an annual event.


75 posted on 08/27/2006 7:53:27 AM PDT by RightWhale (Repeal the law of the excluded middle)
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To: John Robertson

I hope you dont think you made a point either, the discussion is language not illegal immigration two seperate issues IMO.


76 posted on 08/27/2006 8:12:46 AM PDT by aft_lizard (born conservative...I chose to be a republican)
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To: aft_lizard

"the discussion is language not illegal immigration two seperate issues IMO."

These two issues, in our time, are not separate at all. In terms of the current crisis of illegal immigration in this country, in fact, they are inseparable--especially when the article more than once points out how illegals gather in ghettoes and speak only their native tongue at home or in their neighborhoods, and have no interest in learning English. Your Swedish grandmother may indeed have spoken nothing but Swedish until her death, but her children and grandchildren were speaking English. I would also bet that she did not encourage her kids and grandkids to avoid English.


77 posted on 08/27/2006 9:21:01 AM PDT by John Robertson (Even if we disagree now, we may agree later. Or vice versa.)
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