Guadalupe Does The Treaty Of Guadalupe Hidalgo Require The United States To Provide Spanish-language Services?

Does the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo require the United States to provide Spanish-language services? - guadalupe

The Treaty of Hidalgo GUADLAUPE (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_G ...)
End of hostilities between Mexico and the United States since the War of 1848. What are our contractual obligations to the former Mexican citizens and their descendants.

1 comments:

Immigrat... said...

The Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo (1848), ratified by Congress and signed by the President, is part of the "supreme law of the land", and supersedes any state law. The contract gives the Spanish and the Native Americans speak of "the free exercise of their liberty and property." Given that virtually no one could speak of the former subjects of English Mexico in 1848, his "freedom" to teach one the right to speak and learn Spanish and indigenous languages of America. For what is "freedom" in case this does not mean the right to speak and use their own language? Under the Treaty, California and New Mexico allow collaboration of Spanish legal equality with English, which confirmed the agreement.

Moreover, throughout history when a country or a nation conquered another, the vanquished were allowed to keep their language, barbarians, the Roman legions, and the conquest by the present.

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