Many different native languages are represented at my son's kindergarten (over 30 different ones). In principle, that’s not a problem.But I don't like seeing closed-off groups forming based on shared linguistic backgrounds. Every day, I see children who don't speak a word of German—and it seems like no one is trying to change that.We recently had a parents' evening where this topic briefly came up, but it was a waste of time. Almost every other family had an interpreter with them just to be able to follow the conversation.I realize how racist all this sounds, and I wish I didn't feel this way...I think it's great when children grow up multilingual. Diversity is a positive thing. At the same time, however, I believe that if you live in a German-speaking country, you should learn the German language and use it in everyday life.EDIT: Thanks for the comments! And regarding the accusation that I might be a racist: https://www.reddit.com/r/Unbeliebtemeinung/s/vDPwsUz4rA
At least they're not speaking German
Nuke germany and just give them peace
>>536998244
>>536998244>I realize how racist all this sounds, and I wish I didn't feel this way...These people will never learn
>>536998316flippity bippity
>>536998316lmao
>>536998316topkeks
>>536998316PBP