FairAndUnbiased
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Star√ation;2338238 said:Perhaps, the biggest obstacle preventing East Asians from English fluency is their symbolic writing system.
But nationwide English fluency also has its all pros and cons, for example: mastering English help you in approaching the latest in science and technology but English speaking people are just to easy to be influenced by Western culture and ideology.
In Vietnam I can see quite a few English speaking Vietnamese will pay visit to temple in the New Year as our tradition had it instead of celebrating Valentine Days, Christmas Day...
It turned out that people who did their best in preserving and practicing our traditions were the ones had least contact with Western culture.
Bad English didn't stop East Asian countries from getting good at science and technology. In China, there's plenty of English illiterates who still celebrate Christmas and Valentines Day as excuses to party. Same in Japan, there are lots of English illiterates who celebrate Western holidays. That doesn't mean much to celebrate holidays. The real problem comes when you start associating English with upper class and native language with lower class, which has indeed happened in many countries. In Australia, they might have made you read <Black Skins, White Masks> by Franz Fanon, right? That book explains this phenomenon perfectly.