260 lines
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260 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Newsgroups: soc.culture.usa
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From: toz@carson.u.washington.edu (Tom Zeiler)
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Subject: Official English: A No Vote (VERY LONG POST)
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Message-ID: <1t9f3lINN7gi@news.u.washington.edu>
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Date: 18 May 1993 01:45:25 GMT
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Organization: University of Washington
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Lines: 251
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Excerpted from a report
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(note: Among those resources listed in the bibliography, Crawford's book
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Language Loyalties is the most comprehensive referrence for opinions on
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both sides of the issue).
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PERCEIVED NEED
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Arguments in favor of "officializing" English can be seen as stemming from
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two basic assumptions:
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(1) English hegemony is an important, unifying factor contributing to
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national loyalty and stability in the U.S.
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(2) English hegemony is, or could someday be, in jeopardy.
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These assertions seem plausible enough and mild enough in and of
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themselves. But, in fact, the rhetoric put forth by proponents of
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Official English often goes beyond the simple claim that English should be
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seen as an important asset bolstering national u nity; avowals that it is
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the single most critical bulwark of domestic security have been quite
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common. Thus, as one recurring theme has it, we had better act now to
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entrench the status of English so that it will continue to be "the glue
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that holds our society together." And this is where I must begin to
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dissent; for I am inclined to believe that the real glue which can truly
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hold a society together is,instead, this: hope for prosperity and justice
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within the workings of its political system. My investigations into the
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question at hand have led me to fear a climate of intolerance much more
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than a decline in the supremacy of English, and, at any rate, I have come
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to sense that attempting to promote stability through the direct
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legislation and enforcement of linguistic conformity misses the point.
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A VISION OF AMERICA
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The U.S. government today finds itself presiding over what is arguably the
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world's most interesting and hopeful experiment in pan-ethnic communality
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to date. The situation is, to be sure, very far from perfect.
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Nonetheless, increasing recognition and protection of civil rights here
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has been steady enough over the past two hundred years as to sustain at
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least some amount of faith in the attainability of "justice for all".
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THE CONSTITUTION
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In the United States, the basis for all national law is perceived to rest
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within the Constitution and its amendments. Legal and ideological
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interpretation and adjustment of that body of writings has been a constant
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struggle, and promises to continue to b e so. But, then, it is just this
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very fact which holds so much promise for the above-mentioned experiment.
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Some very compelling ideas have been set forth in those articles, ideas
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which, directly or indirectly, have inspired widespread hope in the fairne
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ss and reasonableness of the societal structure which might proceed from
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them. The amendment system itself can be seen as the flexible framework
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wherein the evolving soul of American politics is attested and tested. I
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say that the history of that system shows a very welcome trend towards
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ever more explicit protections of the right of all persons to be free, to
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be safe, and, especially, to be trusted to make their own decisions. So,
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for example, we see that the right of certain persons to own slaves lost
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out to the right of all persons to be free. Similarly, the right of
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certain persons to dictate nation-wide abstinence from alcohol lost out to
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the right of all persons to assume greater responsibility for their own
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lifestyles. With this view in mind, we might ask; what's wrong with the
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following list?:
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Freedom of speech, religion, and press; The right to bear arms; Protection
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against unreasonable search and seizure; Slavery prohibited; Equal
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protection of the laws; The right to vote; Repeal of prohibition; English
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is the official language.
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LANGUAGE RIGHTS?
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Tollefson (1991) has persuasively argued that "policies limiting the use
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of languages other than English must be viewed as an effort to restrict
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immigrants' access to political power and economic resources." Baron
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(1991) states that "priveleging one lang uage leads necessarily to implied
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or expressed proscriptions against other languages." What is being
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suggested here and elsewhere is that it is difficult or impossible to
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separate the question of Official English from the question of linguistic
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discrimin ation. Claims that an ELA would obviously be a fair-minded,
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plain old good-sense houskeeping move are easily called into question.
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And, where the Constitution is concerned, the inherently restrictionist
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nature of such legislation would stand out particu larly as being a
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<EFBFBD>rights for certain persons<6E> type of deal.
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ARGUMENTS AGAINST -- PERCEIVED DANGERS
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The two most visible targets of the so-called English-Only movement are
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(a) the bilingual education system currently provided for in certain
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localities by federal policy, and
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(b) multi-lingual ballots, also federally mandated under certain
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circumstances.
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About these two issues I have only a very brief comment to make: to try
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to flat out illegalize and/or permanently disallow funding for either of
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these options seems misguidedly reactionary at best, and fascist at worst.
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Meanwhile, there are other possib le effects of Official English
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legislation to consider. Enactment of OE laws can be seen as potentially
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unjust insofar as their enforcement might endanger or unfairly
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disadvantage persons with limited English proficiency. Will courts and
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medical institu tions and other key agencies no longer be required or even
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allowed to provide interpreters for non-anglophones? Will public safety
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be jeopardized because government agencies are prohibited from issuing
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warnings about health and safety hazards in language s other than English?
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SENDING THE WRONG MESSAGE
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Whatever good intentions may lay behind the current sentiments toward
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"protecting" English, there is reason to suspect that the need for such
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measures does not exist and that their enactmentment might have unforseen
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negative consequences. Furthermore, a very predictable result of
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virtually any kind of OE legislation is that it will send the wrong
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message to the wrong people -- i.e. that it's OK to "agressively prefer"
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English.
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EVIDENCE OF NEGATIVE EFFECTS OF OFFICIAL ENGLISH LEGISLATION
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Beatancourt (1992) cites a number of examples of hostility and intolerance
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apparently or obviously connected with the passage of OE laws in several
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states.
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- municipal court employees in Huntington Park, California were forbidden
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to talk with each other in Spanish while working.
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- workers at a hospital in Los Angeles were prohibited from speaking any
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language other than English, and employees were urged to report anyone who
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disobeyed.
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- after an OE amendment passed in Colorado, a school bus driver forbade
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children to speak Spanish on his bus, and a restaurant worker was fired
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for translating menu items into Spanish for customers from Latin America.
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- a supermarket cashier in Miami was suspended for speaking Spanish on the
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job to a co-worker.
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- in 1987 , several candidates who had promised to put teeth into
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Proposition 63 were elected to the City Council of Monterey Park, CA.
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After the library was offered a gift of ten thousand Chinese books, the
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mayor and the city council decided to block the library from accepting the
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donation. The library chose to accept the gift anyway, in response to
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which the city council dissolved the library's board and took over
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management of the library. The mayor was quoted as having said that he
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didn't think the city needed to cater too much to foreign languages,
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because if people want a foreign language they can go buy their own books.
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Will English-only initiatives help unify the United States? Not likely,
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if these anecdotes are any indication; because it is precisely when
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people feel themselves threatened and disenfranchised that their need to
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take solace in ethnic solidarity becomes
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greatest. The point to consider here is that this country's biggest
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problems probably do not and will not stem from language divisions, but
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rather from things like the lack of wisdom of its leaders, and the lack of
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integrity of its institutions and poli cies. Fortunately, we still have a
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fairly broad-minded national charter. And the legal precedent which
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currently exists at the federal level is such that concerned citizens and
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civil liberties groups are generally able to obtain redress for grievances
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a rising out of circumstances like those mentioned above. But even so, it
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is disturbing to think that state and local legislation should be of a
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kind that will yield such negative consequences.
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SUMMARY OF POSITION
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There is a growing body of literature devoted to the questions dealt with
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in this paper. The ideas presented here do not even begin to cover the
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range of issues involved, and the reader is encouraged to conduct a more
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extensive investigation 1. For my p art, I must admit to having done a
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lot of vacillating back and forth between wondering if OE might be a good
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idea and thinking it might not. The perspective I ultimately found myself
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wanting to convey in this discussion can be summarized as follows:
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(a) An ELA would diminish the U.S. Constitution.
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(b) There is reason to seriously question the need for OE measures.
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(c) There is reason to believe that OE measures will breed injustice.
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(d) There must be a better way to facilitate stability than via the
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proliferation of restrictive laws.
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EPILOGUE: SENDING A BETTER MESSAGE
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As support for Official English has grown, so also has a counter-movement
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critical of it sprung up. One of the most interesting organizations to
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appear in this regard is EPIC (English Plus Information Clearing-house).
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The "English Plus" movement is cent ered around the theme that learning
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English is important, but that so are the needs and rights of speakers of
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other languages. Supporters of English Plus and others take issue with
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what they perceive as shortcomings in the approach of U.S. English and it
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s allies. For example, after an OE law made it onto the books in Arizona,
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one opponent of the measure called it "a remedy for a problem that didn't
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exist. The irritant in the campaign was the vast amount of money spent by
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U.S. English for legislation an d no money spent to encourage or promote
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English proficiency." Supporters of OE, oft quoted as saying how important
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it is for immigrants to learn English, are increasingly being challenged
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to seek out constructive ways to encourage their doing so. As au thor
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Norman Cousins (himself a former USE advisory board member) has said:
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"Not until we provide educational facilities for all who are now standing
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in line to take lessons in English should we presume to pass judgement on
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the non-English speaking people
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in our midst."
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BIBLIOGRAPHY AND REFERRENCES
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____ Say it In English. In Newsweek, Feb. 20, 1989. p.22
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Baron, Dennis. The English-Only Question: An Official Language for
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Americans? Yale University Press. 1991.
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Betancourt, Ingrid. "The Babel Myth": The English-Only Movement and Its
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Implications for Libraries. In Wilson Library Bulletin, Feb. 1992 p.38
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Bikales, Gerda. Comment: the other side. In International Journal of
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the Sociology of Language 60, 1986. p.77
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Citrin, Jack. Language Politics and American Identity. In Public
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Interest, Spr 1990. p96
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Crawford, James. Language Loyalties: A Sourcebook on the Official English
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Controversy. University of Chicago Press. 1991
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Guy, Gregory R. International Perspectives on Linguistic Diversity and
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Language Rights. In Language Problems and Language Planning, Spr 1989.
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p.45
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Matusewitch, Eric. Language Rules Can Violate Title VII. In Personnel
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Journal, October 1990. p.98
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Marshall, David F. The Question of an Official Language: language rights
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and the English Language Amendment. In International Journal of the
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Sociology of Language 60, 1986 p.7
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McArthur, Tom. Comment: worried about something else. In International
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Journal of the Sociology of Language 60,1986. p.87
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Padilla, Amado M., et al. The English-Only Movement: Myths, Reality, and
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Implications for Psychology. In American Psychology, Feb. 1991. p.120
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Tollefson, James W. Planning Language, Planning Inequality : language
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policy in the community. Longman. 1991
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Young, Amy. In Common Cause, May/June 1989 p.44
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