...an official language? If laissez-faire is the basis of the argument to reject universal healthcare, why not apply it with the issue of language? Wouldn't an official language, in its technical respect, mean government interference?
English is, and will continue to be, the lingua franca for a long time and people are learning English regardless of whether or not it is an official language (it wasn't an official language in my home country, yet I still learnt it out of my own will), because people realize a lingua franca takes off the immense load to establish a platform of communication with people you wouldn't normally communicate with.
English is, and will continue to be, the lingua franca for a long time and people are learning English regardless of whether or not it is an official language (it wasn't an official language in my home country, yet I still learnt it out of my own will), because people realize a lingua franca takes off the immense load to establish a platform of communication with people you wouldn't normally communicate with.