• snooggums@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    The US population is grouped together in one giant pool instead of spread out by state like Europe is grouped by individual country. We focus on national news that affects the large population, and stuff that happens on other states becsuse of the shared identity, while European countries don’t have the same kind of European Union shenanigans that affect all of Europe and mostly post about country level stuff. Communities in languages other than English also tend to be posted in separate communites further separating their discussions from the general purpose communities.

    We are also louder, which also contributes, but that is not as big of a deal as the sheer numbers.

    • AppleTea@lemmy.zip
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      10 days ago

      plus, you know, inheritors of the British empire - practically an unbroken chain of hegemonic anglophones who refuse to learn another language

      • snooggums@lemmy.world
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        10 days ago

        While a huge portion of the population chooses not to become fluent in a language, because nearly everything within hundreds of miles of where they live uses the same language by default, we still provide opportunities to learn languages and in some areas people are commonly bilingual.

        It can be hard to maintain a language without frequent exposure. I had some classes in Spanish and French, but without a large population that speaks either language in my area I just forgot it over time. Moved tons place where we do have a lot of people who speak Spanish and English, but since I’m not part of their community my exposure is limited to the occasional festival or signage as nobody needs me to impose my attempt to learn their language on them.

        It isn’t all about refusal, it is mostly lack of exposure.