BearTricks":318dxxyj said:
I was in Barcelona recently and it surprised me how many people were willing to make an attempt, without looking put upon, to speak English when my terrible Spanish failed. I had people apologise profusely for not knowing certain words, when I was in their country and it was clearly my fault for being an ignorant foreigner. The same was true in Vienna; if anything, their English was better. I think everyone I met under 35 was fluent, and everyone else was putting their best foot forward.
I think there'd be riots, or at least badly constructed facebook rants, if somewhere like Debenhams decided to list product descriptions in another language besides English. In Spain, their version of Debenhams has English above Spanish or Catalan and it actually made me feel a bit guilty that they had to do that. It's a center of tourism, but so are London and Edinburgh. I find it a bit sad that we, as a culture, are so unwilling to make any kind of effort that other countries have to adapt so that our stubbornness doesn't grind everything to a halt.
I'm guilty too. I learned languages at school and I stopped putting in any effort once I left. Many foreigners that I have met have been brought up to be multi-lingual or have had to learn it later in life, just to get by. I don't know many Brits, who weren't second generation immigrants, who can speak more than one language. I once went for a job interview in journalism and was up against a Spanish (or maybe South American) lady who spoke eight languages. I knew I wouldn't get the job and I wasn't really angry because she had clearly been brought up in a education system that realises that we're not a planet of little islands sending ships across the sea to fill each other with arrows any more.
I understand what you're saying and to some extent agree with you (I was a lousy linguist at school, and I wish I'd tried harder). I think you're assuming that the Spanish store is aiming at Brits (obviously I wasn't there so have to guess). It's very common elsewhere, possibly with the exception of South America, to use English as the "international" language. Most people have it as second (or third!) language.
The frustrating thing I find when travelling is that people want to try their English on me, and I rarely get to try their languages out properly, beyond ordering in restaurants etc. It doesn't help that I worked in the computer industry, where the default language and all technical literature is in English.Yes, you get lazy. No, that doesn't mean you hate foreigners or foreign cultures.
If you're suggesting that Brexit proponents, such as me, want some return to Nelson's day, I"d have to disagree with you (albeit very politely!). I've tried to post facts on here, not speculation. Despite the raspberries being blown by Jacob (metaphorically), I CAN back up what I've written with detail, for example Corpus Juris (I've seen the source documents, shown to me by someone who actually attended the Seminar where it was launched).
Napoleonic Law comes from a different Weltanschauung to English law, one in which citizens serve the state, and not the other way round. We had that once; after a civil war and some other nastiness we dumped it. Before the EU, we had a robust constitution that protected the freedoms of the individual; now we do not.
I don't dislike continental Europe - it's where I holiday and I love its diversity and its culture. But we were lied to about the EU from the very outset (see Lord Kilmuir's advice to Heath right back in 1960), and we are still being lied to today - Cameron can't even be honest about how little he got from his "renegotiation" that kicked all this off, and he's not explained why, right up until mid March 2016, he was so keen for Turkey to join the EU as quickly as possible, but now, er, he isn't.
The European arrest warrant does exactly what I said. Europol officers have exactly the status and powers I described. The 'big names' lined up to push the EU all have vested interests, especially Blair (who once wanted to be EU president, don't forget), and lie habitually (surely not!). We don't need or want a police state, and we can do better than this!
One of the recent Brexit leaflets pointed out that if we weren't in the thing already, we'd never contemplate signing up in the present circumstances. It's a reasonable point.
Iceland was hit harder than most by the banking crisis in 2008, yet now it's economy has almost completely recovered. In contrast, eurozone countries are getting more and more enmired, either in debt (Portugal, Spain, Greece, Italy), or in ownership of bad debts (everyone else). It's hurt every major economy that participates in it.
But we should have joined the euro! Thus said Clarke, Heseltine, Blair, Major, the Kinnock Empire (TM), and so on and so on. There's a long list of "economic experts" with a really dodgy history of forecasts.
We've been promised referendums on EU constitution, then denied them. Those countries that got them were ignored (France). Ireland was told to go on voting until it learned what the right answer was. The constitution itself, being rejected, was simply forced through as a new treaty (they can get those through, even if the electorate gives them what-for in referendums). It's the same blooming document, word-for-word in places. What hubris!
Time and again, the EU top brass have shown themselves to lie, deceive and behave as deviously as necessary to further their agenda. That really isn't (or shouldn't be) the British way.
Like many others, I want honest, accountable straightforward and OPEN government in the UK. And I want the state to be as small as possible and big as it needs to be AND NO MORE. Most importantly, I want our government to decide where every penny of taxpayers' money is spent, for subsidies to go directly from the British government to regions and activities that need them, and for the whole thing to be open, auditable and accountable.
but you knew all that, I'm sure.