(I mean, at least in the Metropolitan area) Earlier I waited in line at a shop in Helsinki and behind me was a large group of schoolkids, all various people of colour and all speaking American English with each other. It's a fairly common occurrence in Eastern Helsinki and makes you feel like you're in the US or Canada

It's interesting how quick things have developed just since I was a kid

I think it's cool but it seems to cause Finnish boomers enormous existential anxiety of the Great Replacement variety

  • doublepepperoni [none/use name]
    hexagon
    ·
    edit-2
    10 months ago

    Or because it's what they pick up in the media they consume and on the internet? That's how I was reading and speaking English when I was still being taught incredibly basic shit in my actual English classes in elementary school and I'm a Finnish person

    And I didn't even really have the internet to rely on in the 90s/2000s

    • CTHlurker [he/him]
      ·
      10 months ago

      So Finland and Denmark are both relatively similar in the fact that we are the two most reactionary Nordic countries, but does the Finnish government also just take in a whole lot of immigrant children and put them in an english-speaking "reception" class to teach them Finnish language? I know that some of my wife's cousins from Italy moved here and were just plopped into a class with a bunch of Syrian refugee children and some somalis, none of whom spoke english natively and ostensibly the goal of the class was to teach the children Danish, but since few of the kids even spoke english at first, my wife's cousins had to act as translators for the kids who spoke arabic primarily.

      • doublepepperoni [none/use name]
        hexagon
        ·
        edit-2
        10 months ago

        I wouldn't really know but I would not be surprised. Sounds like a brilliant idea that I'm sure is a lot cheaper than teaching them properly doomer