On Wed, May 09, 2001 at 06:09:06PM -0400, Steve Sobol wrote:
Jim Dixon wrote:
There is a strange assumption underlying what you are saying here: Chinese people can't learn English.
Is it "can't" or "don't feel the need to"?
I don't think it's "can't."
It is horribly USA-centric to expect everyone to speak English, get pissed when they don't, but not at least attempt to speak others' languages.
I would hardly call this USA-centric, whether or not you agree with the behavior. If some other language were becoming as widely-accepted as English is (and if English weren't), do you think you'd see so many people advocating English as a "common language"? The fact that English happens to be it is incidental. The fact that this particular discussion happens to be about China is incidental. The point is that it makes things much easier on everyone if we can all communicate in the same language, particularly when one language seems to already be emerging as "common". What happens when I need to contact an admin for whose language no web translator exists?
China's use of the Internet is skyrocketing. People in China understand that the common language of the Internet is English, and they are learning it.
But there is nothing that requires them to learn English. Your attitude, at best, smacks of provincialism.
I don't recall anyone saying that anybody was required to learn English. But again, do you object to the concept, or just the fact that it's English?
In fact if you run down a list of RFCs, you will find that a remarkable number have authors with Chinese names.
I'm sure there are plenty of Chinese people who speak fluent English. That doesn't mean they should have to learn English to enjoy the Internet.
Nor should you have to learn how to patch and maintain a webserver to surf the web. But we're not talking about end users, we're talking about admins. Do admins -have- to learn English? No, but I don't think it's an unreasonable request when they will be operating a server in a network where it's the most common language spoken by their fellow admins, particularly when their machine is in a position to pose a security risk to others' machines and networks. But I guess wanting to be able to deal with operational issues in a common language, whether it's English or not, makes me USA-centric... -c