salmoneous said:A little girl wants to have a magical moment and speak to a princess, and you've got a problem with that? You would begrudge a little girl getting a bit of Disney magic because, well, why exactly? Because you feel that every conversation that ever happens on US soil must be done in English.
This is only a symptom of the larger issue of the Spanish language influence in Florida, where you can't go into a grocery store or other service industry related area, without encountering persons who refuse to speak English, even though they are happy to live here and take advantage of all the other benefits. People are tired of 'giving in' to this, like the voter ballots in two languages. This latest move just pulls the trigger on some people, including myself.
I don't mind them learning a few key phrases, but to try and limit hiring to someone who is bilingual is ridiculous, and to narrow it even further to Spanish is particularly horrifying, that quality people may be overlooked just to placate locals and visitors.
). Of course that isn't too far from the U.K. where the native language is English. BUT ... Athens, same thing. Waiters, airport employees, etc - all spoke to me in English (often broken, but enough to understand each other). Kenya - sure I learned a few works in Swahili but they spoke to me in English. Madrid, had no problems though the number of people who spoke English wasn't nearly as high, there were still plenty who tried. Same goes for Zurich where the native tongue for that part of Switzerland is German - I was addressed in English in restaurants, on trains, in stores, etc. Italy, yep, again, waiters and hotel clerks addressed me in English. Mexico (granted, it was a touristy area of Mexico), same thing. I didn't ask for, expect, or "demand" that anyone spoke my language. I actually expected to have to deal with my books, expecting to struggle my way through each conversation (or eat something TOTALLY different than I expected because I ordered the wrong food by mistake). But in each country I've visited I was pleasantly surprised at the number of people who spoke English to me. I think that people heard me and my group speaking in English and automatically addressed me in English (or saw my passport when checking in, etc). In Switzerland I found that people actually looked forward to "practicing" their English. Often they said that their English was not very good, but in fact, it was very easy to communicate.
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You are on American soil and therefore you should expect that English will be spoken by the CMs that you encounter. I don't travel to Mexico and expect the signs to be in Spanish and English. Why should they be in English and Spanish here
And what I meant in my post is that the native language and English are spoken in most tourist destinations (like WDW). It's good business. Regarding the princesses, I think it's a great idea, and the more languages WDW ads, the better!