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blackie

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DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« on: August 24, 2010, 06:29:42 PM »

http://www.cnn.com/2010/US/08/24/dea.ebonics/index.html?hpt=T2

DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
By Carol Cratty, Ashley Hayes and Phil Gast, CNN
August 24, 2010 5:45 p.m. EDT

(CNN) -- Wanted by the Drug Enforcement Administration: Ebonics translators.

It might sound like a punch line, as "Ebonics" -- the common name for what linguists call African-American English -- has long been the butt of jokes, as well as the subject of controversy.

But the agency is serious about needing nine people to translate conversations picked up on wiretaps during investigations, Special Agent Michael Sanders said Tuesday. A solicitation was sent to contractors as part of a request to companies to provide hundreds of translators in 114 languages.

"DEA's position is, it's a language form we have a need for," Sanders said. "I think it's a language form that DEA recognizes a need to have someone versed in to conduct investigations."

The translators, being hired in the agency's Southeast Region -- which includes Atlanta, Georgia; Washington; New Orleans, Louisiana; Miami, Florida; and the Caribbean -- would listen to wiretaps, translate what was said and be able to testify in court if necessary, he said.

"The concept is right and good," said Walt Wolfram, distinguished professor of English linguistics at North Carolina State University. "Why wouldn't you want experts who can help you understand what people are communicating?"

"On one level, it's no different than someone from the Outer Banks of North Carolina who speaks a distinct brogue," he said. "The problem is that even the term 'Ebonics' is so controversial and politicized that it becomes sort of a free-for-all."

And Ebonics is no longer spoken only by African-Americans, Sanders said, referring to it as "urban language" or "street language." He said he is aware of investigations in recent years in which it was spoken by African-Americans, Latinos and white people. "It crosses over geographic, racial and ethnic backgrounds," he said.

"[African-American English] is linguistic defiance being reinforced by hip-hop," said professor John Baugh, who leads the public relations committee of the Linguistic Society of America.

The DEA's recruiting "has it half right," Baugh said.

Although having translation help is a good law enforcement tool, Baugh said, the term "Ebonics" may be counterproductive because "the social positions of speakers have been the object of ridicule."

The Washington University professor also is concerned about racial profiling resulting from assumptions made from a speaker's dialect.

While the DEA wants to have the translators available, it may not need to call upon them, Sanders said. He did not know how much it would cost to have the translators available.

"I can't say it's spoken all the time, like Spanish and Vietnamese," Sanders said. "But there are people trying to use this to evade detection" while trafficking in drugs, he said.

Asked whether agency currently has agents who can translate Ebonics, Sanders said some who have worked on local police forces can help pick out words on wiretaps.

The term "Ebonics" -- a blend of "ebony" and "phonics" -- became known in 1996, when the Oakland, California, Unified School District proposed using it in teaching English. After the school board came under fire, it voted to alter the plan, which recognized Ebonics as a distinct language.

The revised plan removed reference to Ebonics as "genetically based" and as the "primary language" of students. The board also removed a part that some understood to indicate that African-American students would be taught in Ebonics, although the board denied such intentions.

"There is something of substance here," said Wolfram, who said he has studied African-American English for 40 years. "There are differences in terms of language and lexicon and so forth that are difficult to understand for most people. So it is an issue. What, of course, happens is, it gets politicized and trivialized by the very term 'Ebonics.'"

The Linguistic Society of America calls Ebonics a form of communication that deserves recognition and study.

"Characterizations of Ebonics as 'slang,' 'mutant,' 'lazy,' 'defective,' 'ungrammatical' or 'broken English' are incorrect and demeaning," a 1997 resolution said.

For Baugh, all languages or dialects are "fundamentally equal." Ebonics is a dialect spoken by slave descendants who live in many countries and don't speak just English, he said. Its early speakers were enslaved, isolated from other speakers of their language and denied access to formal education, Baugh said.

Wolfram -- who has authored more than 20 books on English dialects, including African-American English -- recalled the Black Panther trials during the 1970s, when there was debate over whether the saying, "Off the pigs," was a genuine threat to kill police officers or a more metaphorical saying.

Wolfram acknowledged Ebonics often presented as "nothing but bad language." But, he said, "However you view it ... why wouldn't you want to avail yourself of all the interpretive capability that you can get?"

African-American English is "a systematic language variety, with patterns of pronunciation, grammar, vocabulary and usage that extend far beyond slang," according to the website of the Center for Applied Linguistics, a Washington-based nonprofit organization that says it aims to improve communication through better understanding of language and culture.

"Because it has a set of rules that is distinct from those of standard American English, characterizations of the variety as bad English are incorrect," the center said. "Speakers of AAE do not fail to speak standard American English, but succeed in speaking African American English."

U.S. English, a political advocacy group, supports the DEA's recruitment, said Tim Schultz, director of government relations.

"Having somebody to explain slang terms ... spoken by a particular community is an advantage if it allows them to understand a conversation," he said.

U.S. English's primary focus is making English the official language of the United States and backing laws that ensure immigrants learn English.

Language barriers that contribute to conflicts between nations can be a "serious issue," Wolfram noted. "It's the same point here."

He said the translators could help in investigations, as "the differences between dialect and code words can get pretty blurry at times."

Sanders said DEA plans to continue seeking the translators.

"African-American English is an evolving dialect and in some ways is growing in stature," Baugh said.
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Stoker

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #1 on: August 24, 2010, 07:18:19 PM »

I wonder if the Jive translating old woman from airplane is still around?



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Riddler

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #2 on: August 24, 2010, 07:28:09 PM »


"African-American English is an evolving dialect.....


sorry, but wouldn't that be ''de-volving'' the english language?
nigga's wanna speak some fucked-up ghetto-street lingo, fine.
jus' don' be callin' it no english (worded/spelled-for-effect, you anal cunts out there)
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hellbilly

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #3 on: August 24, 2010, 07:50:31 PM »

I'm kinda wondering how to figure out Copbonics.

Consider this headline today: " Beat Whitey "

A quote from the police:
Quote
We don't know if this was juveniles fighting or a group of kids singling out white citizens leaving the fairgrounds," Sgt. Lori Lavorato said. "It's all under investigation, but it's very possible it has racial overtones.

But in this quote, it seems the message (most likely spoken with an evolving African-English dialect) was very clear:
Quote
On-duty officers at the fairgrounds advise there was a group of 30 to 40 individuals roaming the fairgrounds openly calling it 'beat whitey night.'
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John Shaw

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #4 on: August 24, 2010, 09:03:16 PM »

sorry, but wouldn't that be ''de-volving'' the english language?

http://www.pascalbonenfant.com/18c/cant/

Nothing new here. Nothing to do with black people, either.
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Riddler

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #5 on: August 24, 2010, 10:16:58 PM »

sorry, but wouldn't that be ''de-volving'' the english language?

http://www.pascalbonenfant.com/18c/cant/

Nothing new here. Nothing to do with black people, either.


c'mon now.
altho i do appreciate the informative/amusing link, we aren't in bloody 'ol england, now, are we?
just as we would find australian, greek, russian, french, ital..etc.etc. slang confounding a/or amusing/annoying, we don't get that in this country..
we don't get any other immigrant/minority DEMANDING their slop-speak be taught in schools nor accepted by the general populace, as we do w/ the negroe, hip-hop, yo-yo-yo's.
england kept their shit-talking-slangistic ways to themselves....as have other countries.
american hillbilly expatriates living in nigeria wouldn't expect the locals to accept & teach ''appalachian mountain-speak''.
so, in closing....your counterpoint is fail.
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John Shaw

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #6 on: August 24, 2010, 10:59:25 PM »

sorry, but wouldn't that be ''de-volving'' the english language?

http://www.pascalbonenfant.com/18c/cant/

Nothing new here. Nothing to do with black people, either.


c'mon now.
altho i do appreciate the informative/amusing link, we aren't in bloody 'ol england, now, are we?
just as we would find australian, greek, russian, french, ital..etc.etc. slang confounding a/or amusing/annoying, we don't get that in this country..
we don't get any other immigrant/minority DEMANDING their slop-speak be taught in schools nor accepted by the general populace, as we do w/ the negroe, hip-hop, yo-yo-yo's.
england kept their shit-talking-slangistic ways to themselves....as have other countries.
american hillbilly expatriates living in nigeria wouldn't expect the locals to accept & teach ''appalachian mountain-speak''.
so, in closing....your counterpoint is fail.

Ditto to your racism.
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Riddler

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #7 on: August 24, 2010, 11:20:35 PM »

are you really going to go there?
you are seriously on the ''fightin-side'' of ebonics?
i'm racist for questioning the validity of some kind of word-speak bill cosby may have given birth to (as a joke) in the 70's?
are you THAT fucking white-guilted? or delusional?
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Amazing Richard

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #8 on: August 24, 2010, 11:31:12 PM »

It's interesting that the article is suggesting that the blacks are intentionally trying to talk in a way that whitey can't understand.

A while back, at an old job...there were these two "brown people", and when they were around each other, they would talk their "jive talk", and at the lunch break...they would say things like, "Me no wan no tuna..me no wan egg salad...me wan duck."

But then, when they had too talk to whitey, they talked like pretty normal motherfuckers, and you could understand.

But one time, one of these people decided he was going to talk "jive" with me, and I was like "What"? And then he says it again, in the same "jive" way, and I said, "what"? And then this dude was like, "Am I speaking Spanish?" ....which I thought was sort of funny since I know a bit of Spanish.

And then I was like, "Dude...don't talk to me in that style, OK? Because I don't understand."

I hated that guy...he was such a fucking stupid asshole.
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John Shaw

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #9 on: August 24, 2010, 11:40:26 PM »

you are seriously on the ''fightin-side'' of ebonics?

No. Language just does what it does and that's the way it goes. If someone needs to understand it, then someone will have to teach them. Fact of reality, not an opinion on culture.

I'm racist for questioning the validity of some kind of word-speak bill cosby may have given birth to (as a joke) in the 70's?

No.


are you THAT fucking white-guilted? or delusional?

No.
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Stoker

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #10 on: August 24, 2010, 11:49:02 PM »


"Man, that honky mus' be messin' my old lady... got to be runnin' cold upside down his head. You know?"

"Hey home, I can dig it. You know he ain't gonna lay no mo' big rap up on you man."
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Bill Brasky

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #11 on: August 25, 2010, 12:25:24 AM »

you are seriously on the ''fightin-side'' of ebonics?

No. Language just does what it does and that's the way it goes. If someone needs to understand it, then someone will have to teach them. Fact of reality, not an opinion on culture.



This.  Pretty much.

Language is two or more people speaking, and being understood by their counterpart. 

It doesn't really matter if its sanctioned as a valid language.  The problem they're gonna encounter is, street rap is localized dialect of a larger and more widely understood "ebonics" (its not even really ebonics, but theres no good word for it). 

Its just another money-hole for them to pour effort down, and come up with minimal reward.  By the time they figure out what some phrase means, it'll be defunct.  By the time things reach mainstream, they're usually being phased out. 
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anarchir

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #12 on: August 25, 2010, 01:04:13 AM »

sorry, but wouldn't that be ''de-volving'' the english language?

http://www.pascalbonenfant.com/18c/cant/

Nothing new here. Nothing to do with black people, either.

Thanks for the awesome link! Thats a goldmine of humor.

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Riddler

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #13 on: August 25, 2010, 07:52:38 AM »



Language is two or more people speaking, and being understood by their counterpart. 



all fine n' well.....i don give no fuck about how any ''dudes'' choose to rap to each other.
i have a big problem w/ a larger group of these assholes (some even educated) forcing this shit down the taxpayers' throat.
''you WILL teach this in public schools''
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NightFlight

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Re: DEA wants to hire Ebonics translators
« Reply #14 on: August 25, 2010, 04:28:38 PM »

Hell, why hire anybody?? They just need to purchase all the Amos and Andy DVD's and pay special attention to "Lightnin'". Al Jolson started it, damn him  :shock:
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