shooter444 said:I believe non-english speaking immigrants are hindered, rather than helped, when speaking and reading english is not required. I know there are organizations funded to teach english,... seems like it's just a matter of making the effort to learn, imo.
"As part of a larger survey of Hispanic immigrants fielded in late 2015, Pew Research Center asked Mexican green-card holders why they had not yet become naturalized U.S. citizens. The most frequent reasons centered on inadequate English skills, lack of time or initiative, and the cost of the U.S. citizenship application. These appear to be significant barriers, as nearly all lawful immigrants from Mexico said they would like to become U.S. citizens someday."
http://www.pewhispanic.org/2017/06/29/mexican-lawful-immigrants-among-least-likely-to-become-u-s-citizens/
More like they don't want to learn and want us to adapt to them. Also a lot of them are not capable of learning as they have no education at all. I was operations manager for a company about 20 years ago, I decided to start a English program. Customers were complaining about not being able to communicate with foremen or workers Within two months all the guys stopped going and I was labeled a racist for starting the class instead of learning Spanish myself. I was fired for trying to help them better themselves.