MatchboxVagabond wrote:
Bestiola wrote:
The UK has largely destroyed its other native tongues, and Scottish Gaelic is no exemption. But there is some hope:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_ ... sman.com-1The US put up a pretty valiant struggle against any language other than English being used, despite the lack of an official national language. (obviously /jk, WTF were those knuckleheads thinking.)
There's a lot of, well-warranted, discussion of the destruction of the various indigenous cultures, but the reason why it had to stop was during the ethnic cleaning of German culture during and following WWI the Supreme Court barred languages from being banned from schools.
History in general can be rather more complicated than it appears on the surface. It reminds me of that historian in Boston Commons that studied 16th century buckles or something along those lines.
Oh yes, the US, Canada, not to mention Australia, China and Russia have lost linguistic diversity to a worrying degree. Africa too. Europe isn't much better - dialects are dying in the name of standardisation and "purity" of languages.
But some languages pushed back. In the US, Mohawk has been revived, Wampanoag, Mutsum and others.
The statistics are quite dire though - every other week a language dies since some languages are just more important than others.