Look, you know as well as I that contracts are draughted up by lawyers, who are highly educated individuals.
Not always.
They can also be translated by translators, no sweat.
For a price. Is communication to be a privilege reserved for the elites, or a basic fundamental human right.
The general population does not deal in such things,
I do, and I would consider myself as part of the general public.
and bilingualism makes sure that both linguistic communities in Canada can communicate with the government and with essential services in thier own language.
At considerable cost to the taxpayer.
That is a fundamental right, and in order to work in the government, one ought to be functionally bilingual.
This also causes resentment among non-English-French bilinguals who can't learn both languages well.
As far as classes in schools, they are like any other subject and just as we require math, we require classes in core French or English. Having basic English/French IS a skill just like basic math. Your average person will need to use it one day.
Why only French and English? I used to do translation from French to English in Quebec many years ago; here in China I'm losing my French. I'm sure I could polish it up again within a short time, say no more than three months with a grammar and dictionary. But now what is useful to me is Chinese, not French. So why burden a Vancouverite with French lessons if he may well come to China? Make it optional for those students who will go to Quebec. The world is much smaller than just Canada today.
Just because someone goes to high school in Vancouver, doesn't mean he's going to stay there his whole life.
I'd gone to French-medium school in elementary in Ottawa, then Victoria. And I'd worked in BC, Alberta, Quebec and Ontario. And now I'm in China. So believe me, I know.
By the way, I have met more people than I can count on my two hands from Vancouver and Victoria who can speak French quite well and will be more than functional in their lifetimes, easily able to profess bilingualism for employment purposes.
I have too. But I still won't ignore or look down upon the rest who can't. Let's give them alternative options rather than relegate them to monolingual adulthood.
This business of Esperanto in the government, I don't see it happening.
I don't see it happening either. Right now, language is based on power-politics, with English dominant, French flexing muscle in Quebec, and Indian languages being quashed underfoot. Esperanto stands not a chance in such an environment. Then again, neither does any other minority language. It all gravitates towards the hegemon.
We already have a country full of people who can speak French and English (one, the other, and sometimes both), and it works well.
For us bilinguals, it does. My French allowed me travel and work across Canada. But again, just read quotes from monolinguals, and they don't always see things so rosy. It's working well for us bilinguals at their expense.
How many people do speak Esperanto? 100,000-2mil. Probably somewhere nearer to a few hundred thousand. How many people speak French either as a native or second language: 300,000,000 app. and English: native app. 380 million, second: app. 600,000,000. So between our two official languages that makes about 1.28 BILLION people.
Numbers don't make one bilingual. Plenty of Chinese in the world too, but that doesn't mean you personally can benefit from that. As for Esperanto, not many speak it, but then again even the slowest student could learn it to fluency by the end of highschool without having to spend any of his poor parents' money to travel. Don't forget, just as not all are bilingual, not all are rich. Some come from single-parent families, or unemployed parents, etc. So should the government make Englsih and French immersion free for all Canadians? Sure, you pay for it.
We are extremely lucky,
I fully agree. Those of us who can speak both languages are extremely lucky.
and the resources are there for those who wish to be bilingual.
Really? So if I'm a single mother with child in Vancouver and holding a full-time job and a part-time job, the government will pay me a salary and provide free French lessons if I want that? Proof please.
Where I think the state is lacking is that they are not being tough enough on the issue.
So wht do we do; reintroduce corporal punishment? And what about students with learning diffuculties, dislexics, those from broken homes, etc.? English spelling is a major hindrance to them. You are lucky in life, but please consider the others. I'm fluent in a few languages too, yet I'm still able to not forget those who cannot learn language for various reasons. And it is for them that I'm advocating this.
If you're Franco, English needs to be stressed in school, and vice versa. And we also need to encourage cultural participation. My high school French teacher had all kinds of activities, like French movie night for example (and this was in the US, where there are not Francophone television channels and radio stations). The curriculaum needs to be spit-polished an and the discipline increased. Students need to be encouraged to engage in cultural exchange, pen pals etc... Right now French is treated just like any other subject in school, boring old school. The cleaning up of the second language education in the country needs to be but one feature of the reworking of the entire education system, which I am sure even you will agree, needs a lot of improvement.
After forty years we still haven't gotten aroud to that yet? Wow! Let's wait another forty years, shall we? So what do we do? Spend more money for teacher training? Have we got the money? when we have so much poverty in our world?
And that's quite a spread you got there for Esperanto (what with Cuban Radio AND the Vatican), but go talk to the CEO of any major company and ask him if he speaks it, or go to international courts, or the UN, or the EU etc... I'm not saying some sort of artificial IAL isn't an interesting idea, but making it policy in Canada would be a farce at this pointe, IMO.
That's the problem. You are talking about CEO's; I'm talking about the average Joe.
As long as we have two official languages in Canada, and two linguistic communities as founding nations, both languages must be taught in schools.
Taught and acquired are two different things.
That's only logical. What's lacking is quality in the education system, but that doesn't mean we have to throw the baby out with the bathwater. And what, btw, is so impossible about learning French? Here in Chicoutimi, people come year round to be immersed in French.
Now that's an idea. Perhaps the ministry of educations of each province could cut a dea with Air Canada so that every student in the country woudl have the chance to immerse himself in the second official language for a year. And that money could be collected through donations. Give away! I'm cheering for ya. The kids will love it.
I have known dozens of people who came here not speaking a word but left able to communicate very well after only five weeks. Imagine if they had actually studied French seriously before getting here.
I couldn't speak a word of Chinese either, and now I can get aroud without much diffculty. Still rusty for higher level stuff though, but steady Eddy. But again, we can't pay a flight ticket for every student now can we? We need to consider economic reality, and not just look at the elites who have the time and money to elarn the language, but at everyone. Don't forget, we are a democracy, and so all citizens ought to be able to communicate with one another, including the poor single mother with two kids. And the immigrant who's busy learning one official language already. And the dislexic, etc.