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by der_ketzer
5895 days ago
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Esperanto tried it and failed. Languages are a way of identity. And it's not a matter of "third world countries". I'm from Mexiko and started learning german at the age of 4, spanish (at school) at 7, english at 11, and french at 16. Thanks to that I could study Informatics at Germany. I think learning languages gives you another perspective of the world, helps you to communicate with others in different ways (not only in theri native language), helps you to "understand" their logic, etc. Sadly my english is bad and my french worst. But I'm able to read/speak three languages and has helped me in my labor life. |
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Every first world country teaches English to their students, so who do we focus on? Every quickly developing nation has a culture which encourages English (by her grandparents suggestion, my neice in Beijing is only allowed to speak English when I visit). And by having English language education in developing countries you get past the cultural disparity much quicker. The point here is the difference between missionaries and ex-pats, who helps a country more? If India is an example, the answer is clearly expats.
Language as identity does not explain the failure of Esperanto. Heres the difference between Esperanto and English. In comparison to working through Unua Libro, the benefits of learning English actually exist. If I know Hungarian and Esperanto, I can not find a job as a taxi driver in London no matter how long I spend driving around town. If I know Hindi and English, with a few trips to the library and a couple years of practice I can work at any tech company in the world.