Aportes: 13
Idioma: English
Pupeno (Mostrar perfil) 18 de noviembre de 2008 20:40:35
[LISTO]
1,000?
10,000?
100,000?
1,000,000?
20,000,000?[/list]pick your number (click on the link) and make your promise. Don't forget to promise up (if you promise for 1,000, also promise for 10,000).
Rogir (Mostrar perfil) 18 de noviembre de 2008 23:00:20
Pupeno (Mostrar perfil) 19 de noviembre de 2008 08:53:16
andogigi (Mostrar perfil) 19 de noviembre de 2008 12:28:29
Pupeno:Maybe, maybe not, maybe they are just checking it out. The truth is those pledges are not formulated correctly. People that don't learn Esperanto don't really care about how many people will learn it, they only care about how many people speak it or will speak it. The pledge should read "I will learn Esperanto but only if N people learn it or speak it already", so people that already speak it should subscribe as well, people planning to do it should do it as well.I remember the day I met some British Esperantists who introduced me to the language. My viewpoint at the time was that I agreed with the principles of the movement, but didn't see the point of learning a language which such a few number of people spoke.
Their responding argument was two-fold:
1) We cannot control what other people do. We are only in control of what *we* do.
2) If everyone felt this way, the human race would never be able to accomplish any goal since noone would be willing to take the first step.
Obviously, this made a great deal of sense to me.
Pupeno (Mostrar perfil) 19 de noviembre de 2008 13:35:27
Miland (Mostrar perfil) 19 de noviembre de 2008 15:26:52
erinja (Mostrar perfil) 19 de noviembre de 2008 21:10:20
Tomo S. Vulpo:Now, this is nice, Miland, but unfortunaly, there are a lot of smegheads out there who seem to have nothing better to do than talking people out of learning Esperanto, even if they have to lie to do so.I have always found this phenomenon to be so interesting. Some people are presumptuous enough to judge the way that other people spend your free time, and this seems so strange to me. If someone says they like to ski, and you personally think skiing is boring, would you try to talk them out of their skiing hobby? And if so, why does it matter to you, and what business is it of yours?
Seriously, if someone wants to go study a language spoken in a single village in Borneo, that is considered exotic and interesting, but if someone wants to study Esperanto, it is considered a waste of time. Something is wrong here.
Miland (Mostrar perfil) 19 de noviembre de 2008 21:26:06
People know it's my hobby, and I have passed on information just occasionally if I felt that someone might be interested, but maybe most people aren't sufficiently interested for it to bother them one way or the other.
erinja (Mostrar perfil) 19 de noviembre de 2008 21:32:15
The reaction I usually get is amusement. And then people make periodic jokes about it. Which bothers me a little, because I don't consider it to be a joke, or to be a matter worth joking about, but I just try to ignore it.
Miland (Mostrar perfil) 19 de noviembre de 2008 22:19:30
Tomo S. Vulpo:Seriously, if the language was really as bad as you make it out to be..Who's the 'you' that you are referring to? Perhaps you meant to say 'they', but you were thinking in German, in which the word sie is used for both 'you' and 'they'?