[Foundation-l] Klassical Chinese
Marcus Buck
me at marcusbuck.org
Thu Sep 11 11:56:42 UTC 2008
Geni, there is one basic misconception in all your arguments. You are
speaking about reduplication of effort and about efficiency. But it is
not the goal of the foundation to cram the minds of all the world's
population with as much information and knowledge as possible. We don't
want to rear brain machines. Wikimedia has no social agenda to change
society. Being dumb is okay. It's okay if you don't know the basic facts
of history. It's okay if you don't know the differences between McCain
and Obama, between Merkel and Steinmeier or between dos Santos and
Samakuva. It's okay if you don't know any foreign languages or even your
native language poorly. It doesn't matter. We don't want to force people
to learn. But if people decide, they want to learn something, Wikimedia
is there to help them. That's our goal. To provide the possibility.
Your philosophy matches the Borg philosophy. Assimilate as much species
as possible to become as efficient as possible. Do you remember that in
Star Trek every species has one characteristic feature or topic? The
shortest possible description of the Borg is "Hive", of the Klingons
"War", of the Ferengi "Commerce", of the Vulcans "Reasoning". The topic
of the Humans is "Humanity". You are a Borg, not a Human.
Personally, I would rather die, than to live in a world speaking one
language, subject to one legislature, all people watching the same
movies and reading the same books. Diversity and imperfection is what
makes life interesting. It was you, who said "Totally bi-lingal
situations are not long term stable". That's true. Therefore don't
enforce global bilinguality. It would inescapably end in a monocultural
world.
When I was a child, I loved our holidays in Denmark. It was exciting.
Foreign language, foreign mentality of the people, foreign food etc. The
differences made it interesting. Today some things have changed since my
childhood days. Many typical discounters of Denmark where replaced by
international discounters, for example Aldi (for the US guys: Aldi is
the German equivalent of Wal-Mart [Aldi is present in the US too, but
not as well known as Wal-Mart, I guess]). You can buy typical German
food in Denmark and typical Danish food in German discounters (well,
most "typical" Danish food is going to be unknown even in Denmark
itself, only "stereotypical" Danish food is sold elsewhere). Wherever
you go, there are Burger Kings and McDonalds (in almost every single
country in the world). Diversity is the salt in the soup of life. But
globalization (and a "common language" is part of globalization) makes
the soup very insipid.
Marcus Buck
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