blackshoe, on 2013-November-27, 14:18, said:
Perhaps you should think a bit before you jump all over me. I did say that in national or lower level competitions the language of the host nation should govern. I've been to many non-English speaking countries, and lived in some. I've never expected, in any country, people to speak English just because I do. And I appreciate it when they speak English because I don't speak their language. So your umbrage is misplaced.
Perhaps you should critically read what you wrote and what you now write again.
"The language of the game is English". Nonsense, language and bridge are not related.
"The language of the host nation should govern." The mere fact that you feel it necessary to write that sovereign NBOs should use their own language... "Should"?!? You bet your $%}#}%$ that the language of the host nation should govern. That is so blatantly obvious, it shouldn't be necessary to mention. Writing sentences with "should" suggests that there is a question and that there are alternative answers. ("Blackshoe should be allowed to eat apples." opens up the possibility that Blackshoe could be forbidden to eat apples.) Well, there is no question and there are no alternative answers.
Have you ever considered to learn the languages of the countries that you've lived in? You write that you've never expected people to speak English just because you did. How did you expect to survive?
Do you mean that you expected to live in another country without any communication with the people who live there? I understand that you could manage to buy 2 apples by pointing at them and putting two fingers in the air (make sure to use the right fingers). But I suppose you weren't living under a bridge. How did you manage to rent (or buy) a home in a language that you don't speak? You just signed the contract without understanding it? How did you open a bank account? ...Get a phone line? ...File your taxes?
Or did you rely on people who spoke English anyway? (And hence did expect some of them to speak English.)
Or did you live on a US naval base where you basically lived in an entirely American community, that was geographically located in another country, but culturally in the USA? At least for the language part, that is not really living in another country, is it?
Don't get me wrong here. I have lived and worked abroad. (The fact that I now live in the country where I grew up really is a coincidence.) I know how heavily you need to rely on local people who speak English when you move into a country where you don't speak the language (yet). And that is fine since everybody understands that you don't learn a language overnight. But I would never claim that "English is the language of the game", whether it is the game of life or the game of bridge.
When in Rome, do as the Romans. The Romans speak Italian, not English. And they speak Italian just because they do, not because they "should".
Rik
I want my opponents to leave my table with a smile on their face and without matchpoints on their score card - in that order.
The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the new discoveries, is not “Eureka!” (I found it!), but “That’s funny…” – Isaac Asimov
The only reason God did not put "Thou shalt mind thine own business" in the Ten Commandments was that He thought that it was too obvious to need stating. - Kenberg