Jarnhamar
Army.ca Myth
- Reaction score
- 7,046
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I'm glad the Maple Leaf isn't afraid to tackle the BIG ethical issues.
Check this zinger out.
http://www.forces.gc.ca/site/commun/ml-fe/article-eng.asp?id=6513
Check this zinger out.
http://www.forces.gc.ca/site/commun/ml-fe/article-eng.asp?id=6513
Ethically, what would you do?
Not everyone speaks the same language
It’s mid-morning on Monday. Three colleagues—Julie Paré, Jean Roussy and Major Andy Snowe—are having coffee in the NDHQ cafeteria. It’s a working coffee break because they plan to discuss how last week’s one-day conference, organized by Maj Snowe, was received by the conference participants.
Maj Snowe, speaking in French, asks Julie and Jean what they thought about the conference. Julie says, “Well, people seemed really interested in the subject matter, and the discussion groups also seemed to go well enough.” She pauses and then continues, “But, I heard a couple people complaining about the lack of French.”
Maj Snowe nods his head. “Regrettably, I’ve received many complaints, including a few from Anglophones, about the fact that the conference was held virtually only in English. I know they have a point – there should have been more French, especially since the conference was held in Ottawa where English and French are languages of work.”
He continues in an emotional tone. “But, the complainants have no idea how difficult it is to get technical speakers in both languages.” He pauses to take a breath and then says, “Plus, it would have been impossible to get all the material translated in the time I was given to put this together.”
At a nearby table, Maj Geneviève Morneault, Captain Alain Francoeur—both newly posted to Ottawa—and Philippe Cousineau overhear the comments made by Maj Snowe and Ms. Paré. Looking at one another, they quickly realize that the conference being discussed is the one they had all attended the week before. They all shake their heads in unison.
“So, that’s how it works at NDHQ.” Capt Francoeur says, somewhat frustrated. “It’s a good thing you were with us, Philippe, to translate some of the difficult parts.”
“You know,” Maj Morneault says to her two friends, “I had actually heard that the use of both languages had improved in Ottawa.”
From a defence ethics point of view, what would you tell these two groups of people?