• @JDubbleu@programming.dev
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    542 years ago

    This is basically a map of how many Mexican immigrants each state has. I agree the English bias is not great because not speaking English doesn’t make you dumb.

    • darq
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      192 years ago

      It would be interesting to see the same data, restricted to participants whose first language is English.

    • @kraftpudding@lemmy.world
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      62 years ago

      Not being able to read also doesn’t auromatically equate dumb though. It just highlights a systemic failure of the educations system. And arguably a country experiencing a language divide to this degree is a systemic failure of some kind as well.

      • darq
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        42 years ago

        Many countries have myriad languages in them, often because they contain myriad cultures. That’s not a failing at any level, it’s just diversity.

        • @kraftpudding@lemmy.world
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          2 years ago

          Yeah, but I’d argue those countries either have people being decently fluent in multiple languages (which is not what this graph implies) or they have evolved their institutions and society in a way where meaningful societal and political participation is possible regardless of what language you speak. I don’t think the US is at that level, and I think it being that way if this is lived reality for a lot of Americans IS a systemic failure.

          The failure is not necessarily having multiple languages spoken, but the institutions not reflecting this reality. So you can either invest in people being fluent in a common language in addition to whatever languages they may speak OR redesign institutions and reshape society. Not doing any of the two is a systemic failure imo.

    • Catradora-Stalinism☭
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      -52 years ago

      are you soft blaming this on the immigrants? Immigrants are more likely to speak, read, and write 2 or more languages fluently than it is that the average american can do any of that for 1

      • @nave@lemmy.zip
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        62 years ago

        Not op but it’s pretty clear they’re not blaming it on immigrants. They’re just pointing out that the map has a bias because immigrants may not have as good English skills specifically.

        • Catradora-Stalinism☭
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          -32 years ago

          Its an incredibly large thing to leap to on literally no evidence. Its pure fact that immigrants have far better language skills than the average american, as I said above. They may not know of the racism, but that doesn’t mean its there.

          • @nave@lemmy.zip
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            62 years ago

            Is it racism to suggest that someone might not speak a second language as well as their first language? I’ll freely admit that I’m much worse at my second language than English.

            • Catradora-Stalinism☭
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              -72 years ago

              Pinning the entire problem immediately on immigrants is racist. Immigrants are not a problem, they’re a scapegoat.

              • @nave@lemmy.zip
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                72 years ago

                I never said they were the entire problem, it’s just one reason there’s such a gap between say California and Colorado.

          • @JDubbleu@programming.dev
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            2 years ago

            To be clear I wasn’t trying to leap on, “haha Mexican immigrants can’t speak English”. I was pointing out proximity to a primarily Spanish speaking country is going to lead to a greater population whose native language is not English, and therefore less fluent English speakers.

            I grew up in an area of the US with tons of immigrants, most of whom learned Spanish before English. Going the other way I learned Spanish after learning English, and as such I probably have a less than 6th grade reading level in Spanish because it’s not the language I learned from birth, nor the one I speak at home.

            I also specifically mentioned Mexican immigrants because the other country we border also has a primary language of English, which is why our northern border has better English literacy rates.

            It’s a pretty easy correlation to make, and doesn’t require a whole study to identify the trend. Spanish is also the second most spoken language in the country so naturally areas with low English literacy rates are likely to have higher populations speaking the second most spoken language in the country. Hell, if you look at a map of latinos in the US it’s almost identical to the above map.

      • @Aqarius@lemmy.world
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        22 years ago

        Considering what article this comment is under I kinda have to ask now: is English your first language?

        Because an understanding of the comment above yours should center on the word “bias”, not on the word “immigrant”.

      • @JDubbleu@programming.dev
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        22 years ago

        I’m saying if you’re basing your data off of English then of course states who border a country whose primary language is Spanish will have more people who cannot read/write in English. They’re more likely to have immigrants from said country. As is this post kind of implies not speaking/reading English == dumb, which is not at all true.

        To be clear I’m from California, grew up speaking Spanish (even though I’m white AF), and have 0 issues with immigrants. It’s just kind of a dumb statistic to use given the diversity of the US, and our lack of an official language. A much better metric would be the percentage of people who do not have a reading level above 6th grade in any language.