Somhairle Óg wrote:
Put it this way, 2% of Irish people live in the Gaeltacht, god knows what percent of them speak Irish, between 40-60% (overall? i know some areas are 90% and some 10% etc), so let's say 1% of the Irish people speak Gaeltacht Irish. ...
I always love it when people try to use statistics to boost their specious arguments, especially people who have a proficiency in Irish of 53%.
2% is a magic number. It is often underestimated:
2% is the proportion of the human brain to overall body weight.
The human heart is much less than 2% (about .3 percent) of overall body weight.
2% is the difference between human DNA and chimpanzee DNA - to ignore Gaeltacht Irish is to try to remove the very part of the language that makes it distinctive.
There's probably actually only about 2% of non-Gaeltacht people who really couldn't handle the natural distinctions between the sounds in Irish if they were shown how to make them in the first place, yet unfortunately those who can't (or can't be bothered) are the most vocal in calling for the dumbing down of the language.
Non-Gaeltacht Irish as standard? - the road to a mindless, heartless Planet of the Apes.
Long live the two percent !

(This post is intended, tongue-in-cheek, to show the dangers of using statistics to kill off an "insignificant" two percent of the language. No offense is intended to those hard-working people who, due to circumstances beyond their own control, have not been placed in a position to actually learn the afore-mentioned distinctions and are simply doing their best to learn and use the language to the best of their ability.)