Comment by naturalmovement 7 days ago EO 14224 designates English as the official language of the US. 3 comments naturalmovement Reply generj 7 days ago Which is clearly illegal.Congress would need to declare any official language(s). Moreover, by treaty and law (NALA of 1990) obligations to Native American tribes there must be more languages than merely English. naturalmovement 7 days ago [flagged] cguess 7 days ago This one actually certainly is, it just hasn't shown up in court because no one's dumb enough to enforce it.The Constitutional Convention discussed a national language at length in 1789, and adamantly didn't include a language requirement on purpose.
generj 7 days ago Which is clearly illegal.Congress would need to declare any official language(s). Moreover, by treaty and law (NALA of 1990) obligations to Native American tribes there must be more languages than merely English. naturalmovement 7 days ago [flagged] cguess 7 days ago This one actually certainly is, it just hasn't shown up in court because no one's dumb enough to enforce it.The Constitutional Convention discussed a national language at length in 1789, and adamantly didn't include a language requirement on purpose.
naturalmovement 7 days ago [flagged] cguess 7 days ago This one actually certainly is, it just hasn't shown up in court because no one's dumb enough to enforce it.The Constitutional Convention discussed a national language at length in 1789, and adamantly didn't include a language requirement on purpose.
cguess 7 days ago This one actually certainly is, it just hasn't shown up in court because no one's dumb enough to enforce it.The Constitutional Convention discussed a national language at length in 1789, and adamantly didn't include a language requirement on purpose.
Which is clearly illegal.
Congress would need to declare any official language(s). Moreover, by treaty and law (NALA of 1990) obligations to Native American tribes there must be more languages than merely English.
[flagged]
This one actually certainly is, it just hasn't shown up in court because no one's dumb enough to enforce it.
The Constitutional Convention discussed a national language at length in 1789, and adamantly didn't include a language requirement on purpose.