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View Full Version : PRESS ONE FOR ENGLISH


bsliny
05-16-2008, 01:52 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sE]slv-fvo
TRY this and when you get to search enter PRESS ONE FOR ENGLISH
And see what you think :hot: :hot: :hot:

Rokinronda
05-16-2008, 02:16 PM
Link isn't working

Russ_Boston
05-16-2008, 02:57 PM
I think this link works:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEJfS1v-fU0

redwitch
05-16-2008, 03:19 PM
English was not my native language nor my mother's nor my brother's. Neither was French, Farsi, Russian, Mandarin, Japanese, Tagalog and a couple of other languages I was forced to learn. My father insisted that we speak the language of the country we lived in simply to show our respect for that country. We learned the languages, moved on, forgot the languages as we moved. Today, I speak American (English is a much different language IMO) and dream in German. Get me good and mad and all the languages I learned come spitting out into something totally incomprehensible.

To me, that we cater to those who aren't willing to learn English is just wrong. It is a disservice to those people and especially their children who are born American citizens. It is an insult to America and the people of this nation.

(Gee, get the feeling I have some seriously strong opinions about this subject?)

Good song!

nONIE
05-16-2008, 04:01 PM
BSLINY, :agree: :agree: :agree:

My dear father was an immagrant from Poland, the first thing he did when he got to this country was kiss the ground, the seconed thing was signed up for English classes. He loved and respected this country which is more then I can say for so many of the people comming into this country today! (dont get me started!)

bsliny
05-16-2008, 04:38 PM
Link isn't working
I Tried it and it is working

bsliny
05-16-2008, 04:39 PM
I think this link works:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sEJfS1v-fU0
The link i wrote works i tried it again

Rokinronda
05-16-2008, 04:57 PM
Great song, I will pass this link along. The 2nd link works, The first was not complete. God Bless America!

beady
05-16-2008, 09:23 PM
My grandmother immigrated to the US from Sweden in 1910. She immediately began to learn English and insisted her children speak only English out of respect for the country who so willingly accepted her.
The down side, my Mom and her 3 siblings never learned how to speak swedish, something they all wihed they had been taught.

bsliny
05-16-2008, 09:39 PM
BSLINY, :agree: :agree: :agree:

My dear father was an immagrant from Poland, the first thing he did when he got to this country was kiss the ground, the seconed thing was signed up for English classes. He loved and respected this country which is more then I can say for so many of the people comming into this country today! (dont get me started!)
Both of my parents came from Poland and were proud to be Americans and learned to speak English

bsliny
05-16-2008, 09:44 PM
Great song, I will pass this link along. The 2nd link works, The first was not complete. God Bless America! I don't know why i retried the linkl again and it works but if yours works thats good to

jjdees
05-16-2008, 10:28 PM
My parents immigrated (legally by the way) from Austria-Hungary from what is now N.E. Slovakia near the Polish border. My father came over in '26, my mother as an infant 1910. I still have the textbook my father studied to become a citizen and it's not an easy book. I couldn't answer some of the questions in it. We were never taught my parents native language. It was English only. They received no breaks from anyone, they made it on their own, no free medical, no free dental, no language provisions in the schools, no native services in the local churches. He and his peers eventually built one of their own. It gets my shorts in a wad when I have to choose English, and when I see our politicians bending over backwards to accommodate the illegals who have literally invaded this country, and then see them demonstrating for their rights.

renielarson
05-16-2008, 10:32 PM
:clap2: :clap2: :clap2: :clap2: :clap2: :clap2: :clap2: :clap2: :clap2: :clap2:

gfmucci
05-17-2008, 01:13 AM
I've cancelled credit cards and avoided doing business with other companies who require me to press "1" for English.* I wish I could do the same with the Social Security Administration. >:( >:(

chelsea24
05-17-2008, 02:03 AM
:agree: English Spoken Here! That's the way it should be. :bigthumbsup:

Mikitv
05-17-2008, 03:03 AM
I agree great video and English only here. If you go to other countries you have to learn their language. We have all worked hard, paid our taxes and then see those hard earned dollars pay for illegal immigrants is wrong. We give them benefits our own citizens can't get. We are putting Spanish in some of our schools so their kids can be taught because they don't understand English. Just wrong.

Hyacinth Bucket
05-18-2008, 12:49 AM
:bigthumbsup: :agree: :agree: :agree:

Like many of you my background is similar to yours. Also like many of you my relatives learned to speak and :read: English. They became American Citizens. My Grandmother saved an article from (I think) the New York Times that had her picture in it and others - first women to serve on a jury. She saved it because she was proud. She was an American.

If my memory serves me correctly the US does not have quote - unquote an official language like other countries do. Perhaps now is the time to make it the official language of the United States.

HB

mcelheny
05-21-2008, 02:38 AM
I volunteer in teaching English

Sidney Lanier
05-21-2008, 07:17 PM
As other posters have pointed out, for me too, my one regret is that my father was fluent (reading, writing, speaking) in seven languages (including English, but that of course took him time), and I ended up with only English. This is the other extreme, and I personally feel that I've lost so much because of it....

On the other hand, we travel throughout the world and find that countless people speak English, whereas we visiting Americans have to rely on that because we don't speak a word of other languages.

I had a businessman cousin in Toronto (now deceased) who was once offended to hear another businessperson scream at a French-speaking customer, "Talk WHITE!" (Yes, WHITE; can you imagine!?)

I think you'll hear "Press 1 for English" mainly in the phone systems of merchants who are in business to either 'earn money' or 'worship the Almighty Dollar,' however you want to look at it. For those who are purists, if that's the right word, and choose not to deal with such merchants, that's certainly their right. I do know not only from my own parents but from immigrant families that we've known over the years that one doesn't arrive to the U.S. able to speak and understand English immediately, and the phone systems don't differentiate between an immigrant here six months versus six years....

ConeyIsBabe
05-22-2008, 12:58 AM
AGREEING with everyone's comment; it just doesn't work that way in Miami-Dade County :'( :'( :'(

Sidney Lanier
05-22-2008, 11:50 PM
Me again. Earlier today I went online to the Verizon site to make a change in our account. Included on their site was a link to the list of phone numbers to reach Verizon if necessary. In New York State they gave different numbers for Spanish, Chinese, Korean, and Russian. It's not my place to sit in judgment of Verizon; I can only assume that the company recognizes that these are services that they have to provide in order to deal with their customers. After all, the telephone company is a service business! Are these customers newcomers to the U.S. who can't possibly be expected to know English well enough to converse on the phone? Are they old-timers who just never learned English--or learned it well enough to converse on the phone? Verizon has no way of knowing--and naturally we don't either.

I can get by with my high school Spanish when we travel. However, we were once caught up in an emergency situation in South America where I absolutely had to make myself understood--and even more difficult I had to understand--and I simply did not have the language skills to do this on the phone. If anyone has never tried it, be assured that it's much more difficult on the phone than in person. I was just so grateful that the people I had to deal with, when they realized that I simply could not do it, instead of being judgmental or berating me would instead drag someone to the phone who had even a little English language skill, so that what was really essential communication could take place. This may be somewhat off topic (and if it's viewed that way, I apologize...), but for me it serves as a reminder of how difficult it can be for anyone to have to communicate in a language that they feel ignorant or insecure about....

renielarson
05-22-2008, 11:58 PM
My gripe is this...

Why do they say press 1 for English? Shouldn't it be press 1 for Spanish? Shouldn't English be the first choice with Spanish as the alternative?

jjdees
05-23-2008, 12:42 AM
You've got it Brightspot!

Hyacinth Bucket
05-23-2008, 12:53 AM
Bright - :agree: :agree: :agree: :agree: :agree:

HB