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warmonger1981 wrote:Is Saudi cool or the way they treat women and gays?
mrswdk wrote:We're talking about Saudi Arabia's cool new city that the king has named after himself like a total badass.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
mrswdk wrote:If you Europeans want to cry about the way the sovereign state of Saudi Arabia governs itself then go start an Amnesty International thread.
This thread is about this:
GoranZ wrote:mrswdk wrote:If you Europeans want to cry about the way the sovereign state of Saudi Arabia governs itself then go start an Amnesty International thread.
This thread is about this:
I challenge you to visit that place and post genuine picture from it... If you can
Funny but if Saudi Arabia is forcing its citizens to respect the dressing law in the country they are in, why they dont do the same with the countries they visit(take Europe for example)?
mrswdk wrote:If you Europeans want to cry about the way the sovereign state of Saudi Arabia governs itself then go start an Amnesty International thread.
This thread is about this:
riskllama wrote:Koolbak wins this thread.
Dukasaur wrote:mrswdk wrote:If you Europeans want to cry about the way the sovereign state of Saudi Arabia governs itself then go start an Amnesty International thread.
This thread is about this:
I don't disagree. But if you want to keep on topic, why have you not addressed the point I raised?
mrswdk wrote:GoranZ wrote:mrswdk wrote:If you Europeans want to cry about the way the sovereign state of Saudi Arabia governs itself then go start an Amnesty International thread.
This thread is about this:
I challenge you to visit that place and post genuine picture from it... If you can
Funny but if Saudi Arabia is forcing its citizens to respect the dressing law in the country they are in, why they dont do the same with the countries they visit(take Europe for example)?
I wasn't aware that there were any Saudi Arabians flouting European laws relating to clothing, or that many European countries even have laws about what one can and can't wear in the first place.
GoranZ wrote:The only allowed language in Saudi Arabia's hotels is Arabic. Both English and Chinese are forbidden.
mrswdk wrote:GoranZ wrote:The only allowed language in Saudi Arabia's hotels is Arabic. Both English and Chinese are forbidden.
Why you say so stupid things ah
Saudi Arabia bans use of Gregorian calendar, English language in state bureaus, hotels; order use of Islamic calendar, Arabic only
GoranZ wrote:Saudi Arabia bans use of Gregorian calendar, English language in state bureaus, hotels; order use of Islamic calendar, Arabic only
source: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340 ... 26,00.html
Is this enough to support what I said?
Saudis Don’t Ban English
A reader pointed me to a very strange article he’d come across:
Saudi Arabia bans English language.
As this made no sense, I took a look to see what it was all about.
I’m not sure how an article could come out wrong-headedly. The article it cites, from the UAE’s Gulf News, says nothing about dropping English. Instead, it reports that the Saudis are insisting that the Hijri or Islamic calendar be used for dating purposes on all official and business documents. This does makes sense because the Hijri Calendar is indeed the national calendar. Translations from one calendar to another already create problems when they’re necessary. Performing those translations when not necessary just creates more problems.
The Gulf News article also quotes an unnamed Saudi daily saying that hotels and the like should use Arabic to greet customers on the phone. That’s a suggestion, not a ban. It makes sense, too, because Saudi Arabia’s population speaks Arabic, though English has certainly become an unofficial second language.
English is the language of instruction at both King Abdullah University of Science and Technology and King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals. It is taught in Saudi public schools starting at the fourth grade.
Two recent articles in Arab News also stress the importance the Kingdom and its residents place on English:
Kingdom expands English education
English the ‘preferred language for business’
mrswdk wrote:GoranZ wrote:Saudi Arabia bans use of Gregorian calendar, English language in state bureaus, hotels; order use of Islamic calendar, Arabic only
source: http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340 ... 26,00.html
Is this enough to support what I said?
No.
http://xrdarabia.org/2012/05/23/saudis- ... n-english/Saudis Don’t Ban English
A reader pointed me to a very strange article he’d come across:
Saudi Arabia bans English language.
As this made no sense, I took a look to see what it was all about.
I’m not sure how an article could come out wrong-headedly. The article it cites, from the UAE’s Gulf News, says nothing about dropping English. Instead, it reports that the Saudis are insisting that the Hijri or Islamic calendar be used for dating purposes on all official and business documents. This does makes sense because the Hijri Calendar is indeed the national calendar. Translations from one calendar to another already create problems when they’re necessary. Performing those translations when not necessary just creates more problems.
The Gulf News article also quotes an unnamed Saudi daily saying that hotels and the like should use Arabic to greet customers on the phone. That’s a suggestion, not a ban. It makes sense, too, because Saudi Arabia’s population speaks Arabic, though English has certainly become an unofficial second language.
English is the language of instruction at both King Abdullah University of Science and Technology and King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals. It is taught in Saudi public schools starting at the fourth grade.
Two recent articles in Arab News also stress the importance the Kingdom and its residents place on English:
Kingdom expands English education
English the ‘preferred language for business’
mrswdk wrote:The article it cites, from the UAE’s Gulf News, says nothing about dropping English
Dubai: Saudi Arabia has banned all government and private agencies from using the Gregorian calendar in official dealings.
The use of the English language to answer calls or communicate, mainly in companies and hotels, has also been banned, a local daily said...
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