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To: cll

PR has a legislature, doesn't it? Does it conduct business in English? What about the courts? Is English taught in the schools as the basic language or a second language?

I don't advocate treating PR any differently than other states, but what I don't want is another Quebec situation in our country.

Do most Puerto Ricans speak English. I must admit that all that I know speak English (most from the military).

Why don't PR people want statehood?


19 posted on 02/01/2006 6:28:17 AM PST by GeorgefromGeorgia
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia

"PR has a legislature, doesn't it? Does it conduct business in English? What about the courts? Is English taught in the schools as the basic language or a second language"?

The Puerto Rico legislature has conducted business in English, but it normally does so in Spanish. There's no prohibition as to what language to use. Would you believe that the PR Senate President is named Kenneth McClintock?

"I don't advocate treating PR any differently than other states, but what I don't want is another Quebec situation in our country."

Quebec is nearly half of Canada, in territory and population. There's just no comparison.

"Do most Puerto Ricans speak English. I must admit that all that I know speak English (most from the military)."

I wouldn't go as far as saying that most Puerto Ricans speak English, but it is a mandatory and primary subject, along with Spanish, in all schools. Whether people use it or not is another matter. But, for instance, I have many continentals in my company that have lived here for years and have never had to learn Spanish. This is in the San Juan metropolitan area.

"Why don't PR people want statehood?"

Close to 50% of the electorate favor the pro-statehood party. The other bigger block of voters who support the status quote get nearly the other half. These people are the biggest obstacle. It is my opinion that they just want to keep the IRS out of their lives. I, of course, have no lost love for the IRS but this is not a matter of taxation. We are already taxed by the "federales" (social sec, medicare, unemployment). This is a matter of civil rights. Four million Americans live under an apartheid system, ruled at the whim of Congress.





26 posted on 02/01/2006 6:40:02 AM PST by cll
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia; cll
My experience in visiting PR has been that while the upper and upper middle classes speak decent English, the blue collar and lower class inhabitants (majority of the island's population) speak poor or broken English. I guess that would make them no different from the average inhabitant of Detroit or South Atlanta. ;-)

Another thing to keep in mind: Seven Democratic or Five Democratic and Two RINO congressmen, and two Dem Senators.

28 posted on 02/01/2006 6:43:32 AM PST by Clemenza
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To: GeorgefromGeorgia
Do most Puerto Ricans speak English.

In San Juan many do, but probably less than 50% speak it well. Out on the island forget about it, unless it's a very touristy town such as Rincon. In a place like La Parguera, finding someone who speaks English well can be a struggle.

33 posted on 02/01/2006 6:47:09 AM PST by green iguana
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