But there are few Canadians legally living in Canada who only speak French, and they mostly tend to live in one specific region.
You stated that most Canadians spoke both English and French. When confronted with the dimensions of your lie, you change the argument to one of geography. You do this over and over and over, probably hoping that, when unchallenged, your agenda will be furthered by spreading non-truths.
In America, we're plagued with large numbers of people who only speak Spanish scattered all over the country, and far too many of them are illegal aliens.
There are, by best estimates, about 12 million undocumented immigrants in the US. Of those, about 7 million are Spanish speakers. That means that of 50 million Hispanics in the US, less than 15% are not here legally. So your statement about "far too often" falls short on a credibility check. You are not just engaging in hyperbole here... you are guilty of gross exaggeration. It's obvious what your agenda is.
The key point of my post regarding Canada is that Canada is not suffering from a plague of French-speaking illegal aliens invading their nation.
Canada has had much better immigration policy and enforcement than the US over the last few decades, but they have admitted many non-English speaking persons. Radio broadcasting has been adapted, with AM in the major cities being re-purposed to serve ethnic communities such as Asians in Vancouver and immigrants from many nations in Toronto (to name just two areas). This is in the fine tradition of Canadian stations like Toronto's CHIN which long served the Italian and other European communities in the market.
As usual, you nitpick a minor, beside-the-point issue and ignore the important point. America is being invaded by Spanish speaking illegal aliens who have no business being here.
If you look at the population figures, the growth of the Hispanic population in the US over the last 15 years has been just under 30% from immigration and 70% from internal growth. And the "internal growth" means second generation and beyond.
With all immigrant groups, whether Germans and Italians in the late 1800's or Hispanics today, most do not learn anything beyond basic English. The second generation is bilingual and the third loses most of the heritage language skills. This is why, even with the huge growth in population among Hispanics, less that half consider themselves Spanish Dominant while the rest are bilingual or English Dominant. And the percentage of Spanish Dominants is falling every year as the recession pretty much stopped most immigration.
And don't give me that lame "freedom of speech" argument. If the government can tell me that there are certain words I cannot say over the airwaves or I'll lose my license to operate a radio station, then the government can also decree that the public airwaves are to be used for the entire public good, and some stations cannot be used fir only illegal aliens who won't learn English.
It's a freedom of press argument to begin with, as well as freedom of speech.
Just as there are restrictions on freedom of assembly when such activities result in violence and mayhem, there are restrictions on freedom of speech when that freedom is abused. The classic law school case is a person standing in a town's public square yelling obscenities and making offensive statements about passersby; it's the distinction between use of privilege and abuse of privilege.
Those who listen to Spanish language radio are not only "illegals". Just look at the radio rating; in Los Angles, for example, over 25% of listening goes to Spanish language stations. There are not 2.5 million illegal Hispanics in LA so most of the listening must be by legal residents who like music and entertainment in Spanish better than offerings in English.
And, of course, that is without taking into account that illegal residents from any nation and culture don't generally participate in surveys where they must reveal their address, identity and even income and education level. Of course, for a PPM radio study, they must also provide a Social Security number if the compensation for meter carrying exceeds the limit that requires a Form 1099. In other words, the huge listening reported in the ratings to Spanish language stations is predominantly and overwhelmingly by legal residents who prefer entertainment in Spanish.
If you look at the Italian migrations... which pretty much stopped before W. W. I... we find that in the US we had Italian programming in many markets well into the 70's and New York had two nearly fulltime Italian stations until the late 50's. Obviously, few of the listeners were recent immigrants and by the 50's most were second and even third generation Italo-Americans who enjoyed Italian music and content over other options. Those stations with Italian shows or formats did not stop the assimilation of Italians into American society... many believe they helped.
Which brings us back to the point that broadcasters have always been given the freedom to adopt the program format that seems best to them to both serve the public and to make a profit. There are huge Spanish speaking audiences in many areas of the US, and they deserve some kind of service. Broadcasters are not immigration officers, so we can't reserve the right of admission to only legal residents of the country.
Making radio programming into a Tea Party issue is just not going to work.
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