And, of course, being unilingual anglophones, these people don't deserve to have jobs? What am I missing here?
Nah, you take those vermin and send them off to Haftlingslager.
And, of course, being unilingual anglophones, these people don't deserve to have jobs? What am I missing here?
First of all M. Blackbird, You don't live here and I assume that you just vacation here so the issues that all of us experience on both sides are not just a novelty.
Secondly, I would venture a guess that what people write as their hard line stance is not who they truly are in their real everyday lives.
Augustine Aloysius
What you are missing is the fact that when serving in a restaurant in Montreal, you will come in contact with the public, a large portion of which is French speaking. Regardless of the area of Montreal you operate in. Never mind the language regulations, in situations like this, French is a prerequisite.Are you suggesting that unilingual anglophones don't deserve to have jobs? What am I missing here?
Well,
First of all Double-J, I don't know where you have been keeping yourself, but you seem to have missed the endless news that the U.S. has many millions of overwhelmingly Spanish speaking people and others, around 11 million or about 1/3 of all Canada, neither born here nor often working on citizenship despite amnesty offers, who not only enjoy many financial benefits legally and illegally, but are also the cause of many Spanish speaking job requirements for naturally born English speaking Americans seeking jobs in many fields who cannot get them because of this same situation. In my corner we often have to accommodate Portuguese nationals.
I almost included this in the last post, but I thought it might be imposing on the subject which is Canada. However, since you as a Canadian (presumed) decided to speak on that which you seem to know so little, I am happy to educate you.
Cheers,
Merlot
In the U.S. many are made to compensate for the presence of non-natives
neither born here nor often working on citizenship despite amnesty offers, who not only enjoy many financial benefits legally and illegally
And I still say a lot of what is going on in this thread is comes down to worthless stubbornness.
What you are missing is the fact that when serving in a restaurant in Montreal, you will come in contact with the public, a large portion of which is French speaking. Regardless of the area of Montreal you operate in. Never mind the language regulations, in situations like this, French is a prerequisite.
I was just perusing IT (Information technology) jobs, some of which are "internal" development jobs, and many require levels of English.
According to this demographic survey done in 2006, there are about three areas in Montreal larger than 6 square blocks with a population where "more than 35% have English as the only known official language". The study I have found has no numbers showing "native language". Go to section 7, on page 25.Are you saying that all regions on the island of Montreal have a large French population ?
Maybe the Americans should worry more about their own federal budget and housing problems and leave the rest of the world to make their own mistakes? Just saying !
Regardless, your point is quite clear: if you can't speak French, march on down to the welfare office or grab a squeegee. You are not welcome to work in Quebec.What you are missing is the fact that when serving in a restaurant in Montreal, you will come in contact with the public, a large portion of which is French speaking. Regardless of the area of Montreal you operate in. Never mind the language regulations, in situations like this, French is a prerequisite.
Demagoguery at its' finest: we are talking about people serving the public here. There are requirements, but it seems language requirements are taboo, why?Regardless, your point is quite clear: if you can't speak French, march on down to the welfare office or grab a squeegee. You are not welcome to work in Quebec.
According to this demographic survey done in 2006, there are about three areas in Montreal larger than 6 square blocks with a population where "more than 35% have English as the only known official language". The study I have found has no numbers showing "native language". Go to section 7, on page 25.
By the way, what I said about restaurants has nothing to do with proving a point. I go to a restaurant to have a good time. This is a personal choice: like I said, I spent 15 years in Toronto, and going to one of those restos is too much for me. If friends ask me to go there I will, it is just not my choice by default. I will not call the language police, ask the employee be dismissed or start lawsuits. It is just not for me.
Demagoguery at its' finest: we are talking about people serving the public here. There are requirements, but it seems language requirements are taboo, why?
Besides, change "French" for "English", and "Quebec" for "rest of Canada" and then your quote is quite accurate.
Thank you for pouring oil on the fire...
No, never . These are private matters, not public lol.Sap, have you ever turned away an escort because she didn't speak French? Or do you only deal with French girls? If you accept an English only girl, wouldn't that be hypocritical?
they can learn French... or chose one of the many jobs where dealing with the general public is not an issue. And "James", it would be really nice of you tell us who you really are .... the condition would be such that no unilingual Anglo from the rest of Canada would chose to relocate here due to lack of work.
I have to call you out on this one. I work in an environment where most my customers have salaries in the 6 digits range and, even in Montréal, a lot of them are unilingual anglophones or don't bother speaking any French. This is easy to confirm, all you have to do is go to high end restaurants around Place Ville-Marie and the downtown core. You will see a huge amount of expensive suits who don't speak French. Go in the underground parking of most hi rise buildings in Montréal and you will see Mercedez, Lexus, Audi, BMW. Sit around between 4 and 5PM and listen to the people picking up these cars while speaking on the phone. You will ear English most of the time.
Go in stores around the same area and you can find unilingual English clerks without much difficulties. Eaton center is excellent for that. Ask for a manager and you have a good chance to face another unilingual anglophone.
I have other extremely good examples I won't mention since it would reveal my line of work but, suffice to say, lots of well-paying jobs in Montréal requires bilingualism (read "French must speak English").....
What does the birthplace of who wrote O Canada have to do with anything of what's being discussed here ?
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