this post was submitted on 17 Oct 2025
27 points (100.0% liked)
Philippines
1874 readers
10 users here now
Mabuhay at maligayang pagdating sa Lemmy! 🇵🇭
A fediverse community for the Philippines and all things Filipino!
Started out as a Reddit alternative during the blackout from Jun 12-21, 2023 with over 1k members in just a few days. Fizzled faster than the "I Didn't Do It" kid after a month until it became the internet's Centralia in less than a year.


Filipino artists whose works were featured on our daily random thread covers.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
In a school i can understand a rule like this because it can quickly become a sort of secret language the teachers don't understand.
Same reason in some discord chats, mods need to know who posted what that is against the rules without knowing every nuanced meaning in every language.
In some (professional) events or games its important that all parties can understand each other.
But adults in public settings? Ridiculous and not enforceable. Doesn’t seem legal either but i can see the third world USA try things like this for racist reasons nonetheless.
I think you might be a little lost. The school and museum I was talking about are in the Philippines and the teachers are locals. Though this whole worship of English started with American colonialism...
This was in “all” for me but thanks for the headsup.
Considering that, this is a TIL for me and sounds absolutely insane.
Surely the local language should be the norm, especially in schools. I admit i don’t know much about the American colonies in the Philippines but this sounds like brainwashing. Language can change how people think depending on different nuances it can be expressed, there is unique philosophy in each.
I am sorry for your loss, that not even your teachers recognize your cultural identity is being ereased.
Wow I did not expect for this to get there! And yeah it's just really bad, I thought the attitude was a thing of the past but when I visited that place I was shocked to see that sign. Another assumption I remember from when I was a kid is that the more American-like you can speak English, the more smarter or sophisticated you are. My only hunch as to why English is encouraged at the cost of our language is because a huge part of our economy is Tourism, BPO and Remittances from Overseas Filipino Workers.
I only hope that someday, the Philippines can attain some degree of self-sufficiency, so we don't have to groom our children as subordinates to foreign people.