Slashdot Mirror


Klingon Interpreter Needed In Oregon

myrashka writes "CNN has a report of a position available for an Klingon-English interpreter by a mental health office in Oregon (how apropos). Could this be the start of the next hot job market (perhaps they'll need Nebari-English interpreters next)?"

72 of 398 comments (clear)

  1. What's next for Klingon? by rabiteman · · Score: 5, Funny

    And I suppose in the next World War, we'll be using Klingon-speakers in our radio communications so that the Germans won't understand.

    --
    Oh cruel fate, to be thusly boned! Ask not for whom the bone bones; it bones for thee. -Bender

    1. Re:What's next for Klingon? by bugsmalli · · Score: 5, Funny

      40 years down the line, we'll have a movie called "The Windbreakers".

      Klingons - breaking wind even the french can't top.

    2. Re:What's next for Klingon? by Cyclometh · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nah, all they'd have to do is go to the Klingon Language Institute.

      In all seriousness, I think this extremely interesting. From my reading of the article, it sounds like the Multonomah County Department of Human Services, by law, has to provide these services, and that means that they have to provide translation services for people who ostensibly only speak Klingon. It's like a totally bizarre collision of law and pop culture. I love it.

      Hell, there's probably a research paper in it for someone, focusing on how a phenomenon like Star Trek can have such far-reaching and totally unanticipated effects.

    3. Re:What's next for Klingon? by bj8rn · · Score: 5, Funny
      And I suppose in the next World War, we'll be using Klingon-speakers in our radio communications so that the Germans won't understand.

      So... the next world war will be Estonia vs Germany? (/me points at mail address)

      --
      Hell is not other people; it is yourself. - Ludwig Wittgenstein
    4. Re:What's next for Klingon? by Talinom · · Score: 5, Funny

      What? You have never been to a Sci-Fi convention? OK, turn in your geek badge as you leave the building.

      I just couldn't believe this article when I read it.

      What is even worse is I KNOW people (OK, met them once or twice at a convention) that could APPLY for this job. I can just hear them finally justifying their obsession with Star Trek by telling their moms when they come down for breakfast in the morning that they FINALLY have a job, it is a direct result of their obsession with the show, and they can finally move out on their own.

      This job posting just HAS to be posted at NorWesCon, RustyCon, and other local conventions. I would LOVE to see the recruiters faces as they try to tell the difference between the insane and the applicant (if such a distinction can be made that is). :)

      Perhaps the perfect applicant one of those guys on that DirectTV commercial with the "SuperModels", but I repeat myself.

      --
      "Giving money and power to governments is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys." - P.J. O'Rourke
    5. Re:What's next for Klingon? by Uller-RM · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Heh... I live in Multnomah County, and I actually know someone who could qualify. *rolled eyes*

      (No, it's not me, I'm a Wars freak instead. Although my GF is a Trekkie.)

      This will probably get stopped though once it hits the local news -- the state's in a nasty budget crisis right now (especially WRT the public school system... and right after we paid off MSFT to not audit us) and people are desperate to save money anywhere. Although you're likely right that they're required by law to provide it. If JEDI couldn't become an official religion, maybe TREK can...

    6. Re:What's next for Klingon? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      "I'm a Wars freak instead. Although my GF is a Trekkie"

      Have you considered a suicide pact?

    7. Re:What's next for Klingon? by flyneye · · Score: 2, Interesting

      When I lived in Wichita,Ks.,there was a young couple who were found to have raised their young children speaking ONLY klingon.
      Of course it was probably the piles of dog crap inside,no food and neighbors complaints that led Childrens Services to remove these poor kids from the trailer and their "klingon" parents.

      Yeah,it's cute how far trekkies will go to let us know how much they admire star trek.

      --
      *Repent!Quit Your Job!Slack Off!The World Ends Tomorrow and You May Die!
    8. Re:What's next for Klingon? by Amazing+Quantum+Man · · Score: 2, Funny

      Helsinki is just a hoverboat ride away. /me consults phrasebook...

      "My hovercraft is full of eels!"

      --
      Fascism starts when the efficiency of the government becomes more important than the rights of the people.
  2. Good for them. by Hatechall · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's nice to know that people spend a whole lot of good time religeously studying something like Klingon, instead of some useless subject, like Portugese or Japanese. I think I will spend the next few years of my life learning how to speak fluent Modem.

    1. Re:Good for them. by SN74S181 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I can remember a few times when I was a kid, dialing up the time sharing service from home and whistling into the modem at the other end. This was in the 110 - 300 baud era and I couldn't afford a terminal at home. You could sweep through a range of frequencies and 'catch' the modem so that it would warble back pretty much until you hung up.

      Those were the sad days when you had to go into school and hunker down over a teletype (110 baud, yellow crummy paper, all upper case, the machne smelled like grease) to do any computing at all if you were a kid.

  3. BASIC? by bobbozzo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I heard about some kid who wrote so much BASIC that he started speaking it.

    Does that mean the staff has to learn computer languages too?

    --
    Nothing to see here; Move along.
    1. Re:BASIC? by coryboehne · · Score: 4, Funny

      I heard about some kid who wrote so much BASIC that he started speaking it.

      Does that mean the staff has to learn computer languages too?


      Sad to say, but I've actually become able to THINK in binary and yes there really are only 10 types of people in this world, those who think in binary and those who do not... :)

      Now, if I could only figure out ascii conversion on the fly I would probably be the first speaker of binary.. (jeez, now I'm probably gonna start working on that... I need a girlfreind or something..)

  4. According to The Onion... by scubacuda · · Score: 5, Funny
    ...Klingon speakers now outnumber Navajo ones.

    As for Evlish, don't come crying to this guy when you need an interpreter...

    1. Re:According to The Onion... by coryboehne · · Score: 4, Insightful

      From the onion..

      "I know this is my home, but there isn't anything here for me," said unemployed Navajo nation member Leonard Murphy, 22, who dropped out of school at 14 and remembers little of the Navajo he learned in elementary school. "Everyone's leaving, getting off the reservation. Now there's nothing to do here except drink beer and watch Star Trek."


      Although it is fairly inaccurate that there are only 1000 speakers (and yes I know it's satire thank you) it's really sad to say that truely affluent speakers of that toungue are becoming quite scarce, my generation is almost 100% non navajo speaking, sure they know a little to some, but they are not affluent speakers of the language..

      How do I know this? Well to start with I was raised in Farmington New Mexico which is just outside of Shiprock (basically the Navajo Nation's capital city) and I've had many Navajo freinds through school, only a handful of which spoke any navajo at all, and maybe one or two of which were fluent. Not that I would be able to tell, Navajo is a very unusual language, very gutteral and primitave, although enchanting in it's own right.

      I can certainly believe that Klingon was modeled after Navajo, they sound amazingly similar.. And as far as more speakers of Klingon? It's actually possible that there are more casual speakers although I doubt that there are more fluent speakers.. However I could scarcely imagine it being as hard to learn, as most people describe learning it as somewhat,, well.. Painful.

      As an aside, the Navajo people are probably one of the most wonderful cultures in the world (especially their family values & strength of their family ties) and I would encourage everyone to learn all you can about these wonderful people.

  5. so the percentage of psychos by qewl · · Score: 3, Funny

    so the percentage of psychos that are also star trek fans is relatively large on average? ..intersting.. But even the Trekkies didn't camp in front of movie theaters for weeks to see a movie- they can't be too out of it!

    --

    (\_/)
    (O.o) This is Bunny. (> <)
    1. Re:so the percentage of psychos by ratnerstar · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, well, you don't need to camp out for weeks to get tickets to a Star Trek movie. In fact, the producers might camp out for weeks in front of your house to get you to go see it.

      --
      Just because you sold your soul to the devil that needn't make you a teetotaler. --The Devil and Daniel Webster
  6. Klingon in Unicode by Ryu2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Well, maybe this will bolster the legitimacy of the previously-rejected proposal to allocate a block in the Unicode standard for the Klingon alphabet.

    I'm guessing that in the mental health cases, sometimes, there has to be a written record of what the patient says -- so it could be construed as a real world need for a Klingon representation. =)

    --
    There's 10 types of people in this world, those who understand binary and those who don't.
  7. klingon in demand these days by TerraFrost · · Score: 2, Interesting
    from mental health hospitals to the NSA, klingon seems to be in demand these days. to quote from TrekToday, "Lawrence Schoen, founder of the Klingon Language Institute, recently gave a presentation to the National Security Agency on the language, as the "government was curious about the potential for al-Qaeda operatives to communicate through Klingon""...

    now that said, i'm disappointed by all these people - the NSA and these mental cases... i mean, if you're going to chose a language, why the heck not chose tolkiens elvish!?

  8. I may have a job in the near future by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    seeing as I can speak Mimbari (Anlashok training) and I even know some Narn.

    Maybe one day there will be an opening for a programmer who's fluent in English.

  9. Perhaps they are admitting the wrong people... by marsonist · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "There are some cases where we've had mental health patients where this was all they would speak" Sounds like they had a bunch of drunk Trekies playing practical jokes on them. How possible is it to learn and use this "language" to the point of forgetting your native one?

  10. lay'er down an' smack 'em yack 'em. by GuNgA-DiN · · Score: 5, Funny

    Nurse : Can I get you something?

    Mental Patient 1: S'mo fo butter layin' to the bone. Jackin' me up. Tightly.

    Nurse : I'm sorry I don't understand.

    Mental Patient 2: Cutty say he cant hang.

    Jive Translator : Oh nurse, I speak jive.

    Nurse : Ohhhh, good.

    Jive Translator : He said that he's in great pain and he wants to know if you can help him.

    Nurse : Would you tell him to just relax and I'll be back as soon as I can with some medicine.

    Jive Translator : Jus' hang loose blooood. She goonna catch up on the`rebound a de medcide.

    Mental Patient 1 : What it is big mamma, my mamma didn't raise no dummy, I dug her rap.

    Jive Translator : Cut me som' slac' jak! Chump don wan no help, chump don git no help. Jive ass dude don got no brains anyhow.

  11. At least they're not speaking Toki Pona by yerricde · · Score: 5, Interesting

    At least they're not speaking a constructed language that may hold the record for fewest words in a human-experience-complete language: Toki Pona has 120 words.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:At least they're not speaking Toki Pona by hswerdfe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      :D...now that's funny...

      acording to there dictionary as close as I can tell
      "Toki Pona" Translates as
      Language Good.

      I Like it already.

      --
      --meh--
    2. Re: At least they're not speaking Toki Pona by bj8rn · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Polish linguist Anna Wierzbicka has done a lot of work with semantic primitives - key concepts that all the other words in a language can be explained with. She says there are about 60 such words, that are present in all languages and can explain all meanings and ideas. Here's the list (in thematic groups):

      I, you, someone, something, people, body
      this, the same, other
      one, two, some, many/much, all
      good, bad, big, small
      think, know, want, feel, see, hear
      say, word, true
      do, happen, move
      there is, have
      live, die
      not, maybe, can, because, if
      when, now, after, before, a long time, a short time, for some time
      where, here, above, below, far, near, side, inside
      very, more
      kind of, part of
      like

      --
      Hell is not other people; it is yourself. - Ludwig Wittgenstein
    3. Re: At least they're not speaking Toki Pona by fastdecade · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't get it. This could be reduced further.

      Why express "two" when you already have "one"?
      Why (virtually) antonyms ... small/big? live/die? Temporal versions of quantities - some/some time, big/long time.

      Seems to be lots of redundancy, ne? Just curious.

    4. Re: At least they're not speaking Toki Pona by soundofthemoon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      it's just doubleplusungood!

  12. Google weirdness - "Jerry Jelusich" by Pete · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Okay, this is pretty bizarre - the second paragraph in the article:

    "We have to provide information in all the languages our clients speak," said Jerry Jelusich, a procurement specialist for the county Department of Human Services, which serves about 60,000 mental health clients.

    Okay... I did a Google on "Jerry Jelusich" (note quoting) and it returns only one result. However, when looking at the (strangely small) PDF document the Google link points to, the twoword "Jerry Jelusich" doesn't appear at all. Looking at Google's PDF-to-HTML conversion results, however: Google search on Jerry Jelusich result, gives the text "These terms only appear in links pointing to this page: jerry jelusich" at the top.

    So if the quoted text only appears in links pointing to this PDF... and yet the PDF is the only result for this quoted text... argh, I think my brain is broken *grin*.

    On the other hand, googling for "Franna Hathaway", (the other person quoted in the news story) gives heaps of Google results, most of which seem relevant.

    Anyway, it's a strange story already, I just thought that some might find this sort of odd Googleresult to be interesting. ;-)

    Pete.

    PS. It's not a valid Googlewhack if the twoword is quoted, apparently. Oh well.

  13. I think this is a trap. by Micro$will · · Score: 5, Funny

    They're trying to round up the last two dozen or so Star Trek fans out there and submit them for "rehabilitation" ... probably every fan made Star Wars movie ever made, 24/7, for 2 weeks, and the funny one (the Imperial Stormtroopers Cops episode) isn't included.

  14. Re:Good for them.-Cap'n Crunch crazy. by clambake · · Score: 5, Funny

    "I think I will spend the next few years of my life learning how to speak fluent Modem."

    Will that be phone, wireless, or broadband?


    Why you little wise-ass, I oughtta BweeepPhsoooooOOOOOOOooo sHOOOOooooooo bweeeeeeeeeep be boooong pshoooooooooooo!

  15. I speak flawless Klingon.... by anon*127.0.0.1 · · Score: 4, Funny

    ..but with my accent, I'll never be mistaken as a native. I wonder if that disqualifies me for the position?

    --
    I am NOT a man!
    I am a free number!
  16. Bother! by limekiller4 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Klingon? Oh, hell, I'd settle for someone who can speak "Girlfriend."

    --
    My .02,
    Limekiller
    1. Re:Bother! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's easy, just have her committed.

    2. Re:Bother! by taernim · · Score: 3, Funny

      A /. user with a real girlfriend? Step out of the holodeck son! This is just too much "science fiction" to handle all at once! ;)

      --
      "PC Load Letter? What the $@#% does that mean?!"
  17. Nebari-English interpreters... by Psykechan · · Score: 2, Funny

    (perhaps they'll need Nebari-English interpreters next)?

    Don't be silly. They would just inject the patient with translator microbes if they ever had that sort of situation.

  18. What's next? by TummyX · · Score: 3, Funny

    $0...4Re +heY g01Ng +0 N33d @ L3Et 5p3aK 1n+erpre+Er nEXt?

    1. Re:What's next? by ubernostrum · · Score: 2, Funny
      $0...4Re +heY g01Ng +0 N33d @ L3Et 5p3aK 1n+erpre+Er nEXt?

      No, the l33t speakers are already urgently needed in other areas.

  19. Klingon Duictionary by soliaus · · Score: 2, Informative
    That poor tripod page... CNN should know better than to link to a freehosting site.

    Heres a live interperater:
    http://www.darktrekvoyages.net/klingonDictionary.h tml

    --
    Speaking at Defcon 12 - Credit Card Networks Revisted: Pen
  20. As an Oregonian... by Pettifogger · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As someone who lives in Oregon, this story is *not* going to go over well with the natives. As people may have noticed, the unemployment rate here is the highest in the nation, Oregon has the shortest school year, and even the courts are closed on Fridays. And now Multnomah County (where Portland is) is going to hire a Klingon interpreter after having laid off numerous school teachers, police officers, and others people see as "more necessary" public servants. There's going to be a fight over this... I can't wait to see the outfall.

    --

    IAAL

    1. Re:As an Oregonian... by Dr.+Photo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Maybe the disgruntled civil servants can challenge the Klingon interpreter to ritual hand-to-hand combat... :-)

    2. Re:As an Oregonian... by dietz · · Score: 4, Informative

      This is a contract position.

      No money will be paid unless the person is actually called to duty.

  21. jumping jesus christ.... by maxpublic · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If ever there was an indication that the empire is in decline, this is it. During the worst recession in more than 20 years, in the state with the highest unemployment rate, my taxes go to support the hiring of some geeky twit who speaks a made-up language from a second-rate sci-fi TV show.

    If I had a shadow of a hope that America might somehow regain its senses and do away with the recent orgy of idiocies it seems to revel in, this has pretty much quashed it. Any society which does something this incredibly stupid is a goner.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    1. Re:jumping jesus christ.... by bj8rn · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I personally think that the need for a Klingon interpreter in a mental hospital is a much bigger issue to worry about than your $.02 being paid to one. Why do they need a Klingon speaker? Do they really have so many patients who won't speak any other language? OK, they hire a geek who can speak Klingon - but this means that they have other geeks (who else would bother to learn Klingon) in a pretty bad shape in the institution.

      Stupid things (or things that seem stupid to others - as an anonymous kid said: "Kids don't do stupid things. They have their reasons.") have been done everywhere and everywhen, but the number of people who suffer from mental problems is big only when there's something wrong with the society. Yes, the hiring of Klingon interpreters is a sign, but it's not "We're doomed, they hired Klingon speakers", but "We're doomed, they need Klingon speakers".

      --
      Hell is not other people; it is yourself. - Ludwig Wittgenstein
  22. Thus spake the healthcare admin by hubbah · · Score: 2, Funny

    Health Admin: "I'm sorry, we're squeezed for cash, so you'll only be able to see your psychiatrist once every three months... But rest assured, he'll have a Klingon interpreter standing by each and every time."

    Patient: "[in Klingon]Phew..."

    ------
    If you thought this was funny, visit Stinky Shorts just to see how mistaken you are.

  23. is this really necessary? by prockcore · · Score: 4, Funny

    Couldn't the nurses just translate this simple phrase in to klingon and memorize it:

    "You're a dork. No more TV for you. Go outside."

  24. This area of the U.S. is called "Ecotopia". by Futurepower(R) · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I live here in Portland, Oregon. This area of the U.S. is called "Ecotopia". Traditionally, people have come here who are more idealistic about the environment, and about everything. (For an explanation of Ecotopia, see the book, The Nine Nations of North America, by Joel Garreau.)

    In a way, it makes sense. Mental patients are often extremely rigid. Some won't communicate at all. If the only way to communicate with a mental patient is in Klingon, that might be better than not communicating. The problems of dealing with a mentally ill patient are often far more difficult than hiring someone to speak Klingon. The expense of dealing with someone who won't communicate at all can be huge.

    The state requires that hospitals hire translators for people who don't speak English well. This is because mistakes in communicating about medical things can easily be life-threatening. This is more true because people who don't speak English well often try to avoid going to hospitals, so when they do go to one, they are often VERY sick. Some of my friends have worked as translators.

    Portland is more international than Georgia. There are many people from all over the world here. We have more than 8,000 Hmong tribespeople from the mountains of Vietnam here in Portland, for example. So, there are often adjustments to the special requirements of people from other cultures. As a volunteer, I've taught English to Iranian women, for example. It was interesting getting to know them; Iranians are far different than you would guess after you have read U.S. government information about Iran. The 100 or more Iranians that I've met are gentle and friendly and concerned about family. The Iranians I've met are light years away from being terrorists.

    1. Re:This area of the U.S. is called "Ecotopia". by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've lived in Oregon for 10 years now and I've got to say that Oregon is the most provincial place I've lived in.

      There is an ideal of Cascadia or Ecotopia in some circles but when it comes down to it the Cascadians or Ecotopians are the ones lighting cars on fire down in Eugene or destroying the Oregon State botany research.

      Portland is the whitest city in the United States so I don't think there is any room for someone to call Portland more "international" than anywhere else.

      Hell Sioux Falls South Dakota is more diverse than Portland.

      "Traditionally, people have come here who are more idealistic about the environment, and about everything."

      That maybe true in a cluster in Southeast Portland and among the students at Reed, but it's not true of Portland, the Metro Area or the state.

    2. Re:This area of the U.S. is called "Ecotopia". by Xerithane · · Score: 2

      In a way, it makes sense. Mental patients are often extremely rigid. Some won't communicate at all. If the only way to communicate with a mental patient is in Klingon, that might be better than not communicating. The problems of dealing with a mentally ill patient are often far more difficult than hiring someone to speak Klingon. The expense of dealing with someone who won't communicate at all can be huge.

      Call me insensitive, but so what? Yes, they are mental patients. Yes, they are insane. No, they won't communicate in a real language. Treat them like they don't speak. Treat them like they speak gibberish, as a lot of mental patients do. My tax dollars (and yours) are paying someone to speak a fictional language... don't you find that a bit wrong?

      Portland is more international than Georgia. There are many people from all over the world here. We have more than 8,000 Hmong tribespeople from the mountains of Vietnam here in Portland, for example. So, there are often adjustments to the special requirements of people from other cultures. As a volunteer, I've taught English to Iranian women, for example. It was interesting getting to know them; Iranians are far different than you would guess after you have read U.S. government information about Iran. The 100 or more Iranians that I've met are gentle and friendly and concerned about family. The Iranians I've met are light years away from being terrorists.

      Klingons aren't fucking real. These people are mentally divergent, and need help understanding that Klingon's don't fucking exist. They don't need someone to speak Klingon because it will enforce their delusions.

      But you are right, Portland does have a lot of ethnic diversity. However, Klingons are fucking real. I can't believe this, and I'm pissed that our public schools are experiencing really shitty funding problems and now we're hiring figments of peoples imaginations...

      Yeah, fuck it, I'm moving out.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
    3. Re:This area of the U.S. is called "Ecotopia". by dvdeug · · Score: 2, Insightful

      My tax dollars (and yours) are paying someone to speak a fictional language... don't you find that a bit wrong?

      No? You're drawing an arbitrary line between fictional and real (a lot of modern languages have been edited by a linguist along the line; modern Hebrew being a prime example) and saying that we shouldn't help someone who desperately needs help because the language they prefer to speak is on the other side of that line.

      Klingons aren't fucking real.

      Klingon speakers are.

      These people are mentally divergent,

      So was Einstein, and many other people who changed our world. As a matter of fact, genius itself is mentally divergent.

      and need help understanding that Klingon's don't fucking exist. They don't need someone to speak Klingon because it will enforce their delusions.

      Have you met them, and done a psychological evaluation? If not, how you can say what they need and what speaking Klingon will do to them? Maybe the best we can do is four padded walls and three square meals for the rest of their lives. Maybe they just need some medication, which we can administer if we can just tell them to hold still. Maybe they need someone to talk them out of the corner of the mind they're hiding in, in the only language they understand at the moment.

      our public schools are experiencing really shitty funding problems

      I can see the effect it had on your language skills, and the wide command (or lack of) adjectives it gave you.

      we're hiring figments of peoples imaginations...

      I hate to mention this to you, but that's what languages are. No language has any reality outside the mind of a person.

    4. Re:This area of the U.S. is called "Ecotopia". by Linux+Ate+My+Dog! · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Klingons aren't fucking real.

      The language is. To quite a degree. So engaging them in that language is not a denial of reality.

      These people are mentally divergent, and need help understanding that Klingon's don't fucking exist.

      Perhaps they actually know that. The artcile does not in any way address what reality is or is not being engaged in by delivering services in language that actually exists.

      Maybe they are dealing with schizophrenics who resort to speaking Klingon to keep Echelon at bay because the Walt Disney Inc. / CIA / Apple conspiracy is after them and if they speak English they may trigger the floating nano-microphones that hang in the air. That is a 'reality' that a mental-health professional may not want to engage either, but you still want to know if these people are having side-effects when they have started taking their medication.

    5. Re:This area of the U.S. is called "Ecotopia". by outsider007 · · Score: 2, Funny

      These people are mentally divergent, and need help understanding that Klingon's don't fucking exist.
      I wonder if they've tried holding out a iPod and telling them that it's a universal translator. it might make them start speaking english.

      --
      If you mod me down the terrorists will have won
    6. Re:This area of the U.S. is called "Ecotopia". by Xerithane · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So was Einstein, and many other people who changed our world. As a matter of fact, genius itself is mentally divergent.

      You need to go read some books, Einstein was not mentally divergent. He had a very good grasp on reality.

      I can see the effect it had on your language skills, and the wide command (or lack of) adjectives it gave you.

      Now I know you're a dipshit, aside from the Einstein comment. People who use "profanity" are of a lessure statute. Yeah.. keep it up.

      I hate to mention this to you, but that's what languages are. No language has any reality outside the mind of a person.

      Equating any language and "Klingon" is just retarded. People who are this obsessed with a TV show should be put into the next reality based TV show. Put 3 people from each dumbass Sci-Fi show with a cult following, and let them fight to the death. It'd be like watching declawed sloths try to attack each other.

      --
      Dacels Jewelers can't be trusted.
  25. interesting by deus_X_machina · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While I agree that it's a waste of a budget in Oregon, it's fascenating that entertainment is actually creating languages and defining a seperate culture.

    Language been an evolving process for thousands of years, actually growing less complex and more flexible as the society grows more complex. (Ancient Greek is EXTREMELY complex where as modern Greek had to adapt). Roddenberry managed to do this in less than 50 years, though I doubt Klingon contains the complexities and flexibility of a modern language.

    Society is defined as "A group of humans broadly distinguished from other groups by mutual interests, participation in characteristic relationships, shared institutions, and a common culture" for which Star trek now fits the bill, so we're actually creating societies and cultures within a society and a culture through entertainment, yet we're all still linked to a larger one by our nationality, being a human, etc.

    What I'm saying is that the ability to knowingly create a distinct culture is pretty interesting, and it shows society has become incredibly complex and that entertainment and pop culture play such a huge role in our society today that its mind blowing.

    --
    "In a Democracy, people get the kind of government they deserve." -Winston Churchill
    1. Re:interesting by Cyclometh · · Score: 3, Informative

      Uh, not quite true. The language was originally created for one of the movies, and was a full-fledged language with its own grammar and syntax, invented by a linguist, not a fan.

      It's been extended and promoted by fans, true, but the original language was invented by a linguist.

  26. Conlangs by Xouba · · Score: 4, Interesting
    studying something like Klingon, instead of some useless subject, like Portugese or Japanese.

    Why not?

    There are people that like to learn languages to speak and express themselves in those languages with people from other places. That is the people that will learn portuguese, japanese, swedish or other languages with a few million speakers.

    But then, there is also another bunch of people that just likes languages. I.e., knowing how they work, why they work like that ... and of course, creating new languages. That's what Tolkien did, that's what Marc Okrand did (he's the creator of Klingon), and that's what many people is doing. It has even a name, and it's conlanging (from CONstructed LANGuages). A wonderful introductory piece is at Boheme Magazine.

    The official meeting place for conlangers is CONLANG, a mailing-list that has been going strong since 1991. And for links, you have conlanglinks, with many resources to know more about conlanging or about languages in general. The audience of CONLANG is very diverse, but I'd dare to say that most of them are either programmers or language-related people (teachers, linguists, etc.)

    Conlanging is fun. Really :-) I'm no linguist, but conlanging is something very creative, and for me it's quite like a programming problem: you have some rules (that you create), and have to use them to express all the things that a language can express. And from the time that you express something in your own created tongue, you're hooked %-)

    Anyway, I can understand that I'm quite weird and that many people consider this a loss of time. But hey, even Eric Raymond likes it. Basically, if you like RP games and science-fiction and have somewhat of a creative streak, you very well could like conlanging.

    My own conlang is named Unahoban, and a quite incomplete and sometimes incoherent grammar is here.

  27. Klingon? That's too easy! by evalhalla · · Score: 4, Funny

    By the time they find and commit me I will speak only the language I'll have developed. [indulges in a mad laughter]

  28. before you start talking about cost & about el by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    If you read this artical over at oregonlive.com you will find out that this will cost NO MONEY UNLESS IT IS USED

    http://oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/ ba se/news/105256813916000.xml

    From the above link
    "Multnomah County is looking for a Klingon interpreter -- just in case.

    The county doesn't expect to be invaded by the alien warriors from "Star Trek" movies and TV series. But the office that treats county mental health patients wants to be prepared in case a client arrives in an emergency room gabbing in the galactic language.

    "We have to provide information in all the languages our clients speak," says Jerry Jelusich, a procurement specialist for the county Department of Human Services, which serves some 60,000 mental health clients.

    So if a patient speaks only Klingon, the county must respond with a Klingon interpreter. Officials have decided to include it with about 55 languages, some of which, such as Russian and Vietnamese, are widely spoken, and some, such as Dari and Tongan, are seldom spoken.

    In recent years, Klingon has gone from being a fictional tongue to a complete language, with its own grammar, syntax and vocabulary. Jelusich and colleagues took note of a recent article in The Oregonian about a Portlander who sings karaoke in Klingon. Their later research satisfied them that Klingon is for real.

    The county would pay a Klingon interpreter only in the unlikely case he or she was actually called into service.

    "We said, 'What the heck, let's throw it in,' " Jelusich says. "It doesn't cost us any money."

    The county's purchasing administrator, Franna Hathaway, greeted the request with initial skepticism. "I questioned it myself when it first came in. "

    But, she adds, "There are some cases where we've had mental health patients where this was all they would speak."

    Jelusich says that in reality, no patient has yet tried to communicate in Klingon. But the possibility that a patient could believe himself or herself to be a Klingon doesn't seem so far-fetched.

    "I've got people who think they're Napoleon," he says.

    Multnomah County Chairwoman Diane Linn could not be reached for comment. Next up: another mythical language popularized by The "Lord of the Rings" films.

    "The kids," Jelusich says, "are learning to speak Elvish." "

  29. There are worse... by mlush · · Score: 4, Funny

    I've know people only capable of communicating in quotes from Monty Python and/or The Goon Show

  30. Silly Humans! by fm6 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    One thing that always irritated me when they revived the TV version of Star Trek: Picard always addressed Klingons with a boistrous "Qapla'!" ("Success!"), as if it were the equivalent of "goodbye". I'm not one of those people who makes a hobby out of studying Klingon (excuse me, "tlhIngan Hol"), but I do remember an interview with Marc Okrand on NPR. In the usual NPR manner, they asked him to say goodbye in Klingon. He responded that Klingons had no use for human-style politeness -- when a Klingon is done talking, he just leaves.

    But perhaps it makes sense. Given Picard's officious know-it-allness, he's probably not the great expert on Klingon culture that he pretends to be! Rather like that guy in Len Deighton's novels who thinks knowing a smattering of Cantonese gives him license to torture Chinese waiters.

    And of course, rather than correct Picard, the Klingons would just say "Qapla'" back at him. Easier than ripping his throat out, as he deserves. Silly humans!

  31. calm down (translation jobs) by phr2 · · Score: 4, Informative

    It's not like they're going to hire a full time Klingon translator and pay him/her to sit around all day in case a Klingon-speaking nutcase checks into the mental hospital. The way these translation gigs work is you sign up, they do a little bit of checking of your credentials and then they put your name on a list of people who speak that language. On the occasion that your skill is needed, they call you, you translate (often over the phone, often for just a few minutes) and you get paid for the time spent. If they never get another Klingon speaking patient, you don't get called and they haven't really spent anything (maybe they call you once a year or so to make sure you're still available). If they do get such a patient they call you and pay a few hours (or maybe minutes) of your translation bill which is probably much less than the amount they'd have to pay some doctor or other health professional to find out what the heck is wrong with the poor loon without your help.

    So stop freaking out--it's not draining megabucks of your taxes, it's just putting some more phone numbers in a file. It's a completely sensible thing to do if these "Klingon patient" incidents have hapened in the past.

    Also, I can tell you, a friend of mine is a translator, and sadly they don't get paid very much.

  32. Shakespeare anyone? by Morky · · Score: 2, Interesting
  33. Re:Good for them.-Cap'n Crunch crazy. by Hellkitten · · Score: 3, Funny

    BweeepPhsoooooOOOOOOOooo sHOOOOooooooo bweeeeeeeeeep be boooong pshoooooooooooo!

    R2D2 is that you? Long time no see. Where have you been all this time?

    --
    - We are the slashdot. Resistance is futile. Prepare to be moderated -
  34. huh? by zogger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I live in georgia, and although I don't live atlanta metro right now, I did for 15 years. Who told you that there aren't widely diverse cultures and languages spoken? I can take you to generic waffle houses just a few miles apart where in one all you will hear is mostly african dialects(like somali,ethiopian,etc), drive a few miles, various asian, another few miles pure normal bubba, another few miles spanish, then another few miles pure ebonics that can be as incomphrehensible as to classify as a foreign language. There's an area outside atlanta so completely asian it's called "chambodia" a mix of "chamblee" the suburb and cambodia. There's a huge mix, people from all over the planet live here, you will definetly hear different languages spoken when you go out to the store, etc.

    Sounds more like typical regional bias "elitness" to me. Everyone's pet area is "the best" or "well, WE have such and such and THEY don't and....." and everyone else's area is "weird and has such and such a stereotype attributed to it". That's just bogus man, typical jingoism.

    Here's a sterotype buster for you. I used to live in rural vermont for awhile. Some of the most inbred brain dead redneck hillbillies I ever met lived there,beat the pants off some of the good ole boys around here where I live now in north georgia with just sheer lameness, along with pleasant people, and people who could hold up their end of a conversation without effort. Now you wouldn't think that because of the "understood stereotype" of various regions, but really, regional bias based on false claims is just as bogus a junk science as any other loon concept.

  35. 120,000$ waste by deus_X_machina · · Score: 3, Funny

    Oh that's just great. Now a degree in KLINGON has more practical application than my liberal arts degree...

    --
    "In a Democracy, people get the kind of government they deserve." -Winston Churchill
  36. gone too far? by snero3 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I know I am probably going to get flamed for this but don't you think that is has gone too far when public money is spent on something like this? I mean while we are at it why don't we just employ translators for every factious language, hell I had a secret language when I was 3 maybe they can employ someone to translate that.

    --
    It said "windows 98 or better" so I installed Linux
  37. Re:Bubba Dont Get It by Stephen+VanDahm · · Score: 2, Interesting

    it is beyond my life experience that the state would cater to such a bizarre whim as speaking "Klingon".

    The translator would be working with the mentally ill. The state has encountered mentally ill people that, for whatever reason, refused to speak in any language but Klingon, and since these people are mentally ill, you can't just require them to speak English. So, as you can see, there is at least some need for a Klingon interpreter.

    As bizzare as this sounds to people like us (I live in South Carolina), it's much more humane than what happens to the mentally ill in our states. In South Carolina, at least, the Department of Mental Health is so horribly underfunded that they can barely operate.

    Steve

  38. -5 stupid mods by Politburo · · Score: 2, Informative

    The position is "on-call". No Klingon patients, no money spent.

  39. I taught Klingon for money by Bogatyr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In the late 80s and early 90s I was interested in artifical languages: Esperanto, Volapuk, the loglan/lojban thing, and so on - the head of my thesis committee was a linguistics professor, and so I spent a lot of grad school doing linguistics-oriented work. I spent about a year studying Klingon at the time.
    Around 1994, a friend called me at work asking if I'd gotten the job, but I had no idea what he was talking about as I hadn't read Sunday's want ads. Apparently the local community college had advertised for instructors in the Continuing Education department, and in the list of twenty or so things (auto repair, Indian cooking, etc.), they'd listed "Klingon language and culture". So I called, found the head of the con ed department was a Star Trek fan and wanted to see if there was anyone around who could teach the class. She hired me by the end of the phone call for an evening class. The class was offered under the foreign language section of the continuing education divison, not the pop culture section.
    Interesting sidenote: community colleges here are part of the county/state government, so salaries are set by law and aren't negotiable. Since I had a master's degree in a relevant field, my per-hour pay for teaching Klingon was higher than what I was making per-hour as a technical writer.
    I taught for one semester, once a week. Some of the students who showed up seemed disappointed I was actually teaching a language, as some had signed up thinking they'd spend the entire time talking about that week's episode of Star Trek: Deep Space 9. The ones who stuck with the class surprised me at how fast they learned. There weren't enough pre-registrations to offer the course a second semester, so we only did it the one time.

  40. They can use Google by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2, Informative

    Google support Klingon, amongst the amazing number of languages that they support: Google in Klingon

    --
    Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  41. Translation requested by Alomex · · Score: 3, Funny



    How does one say "I need to get a life" in Klingon?

  42. Debunked on k5 by ubernostrum · · Score: 4, Informative

    Seth Finkelstein investigates and finds it's a joke. Film at 11.

  43. Native Klingon speakers by Vexar · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is ludicrist. No one raises their child to speak only Klingon. I mean, if all they watch on TV is Star Trek, they are still going to pick up a human language, if not from the longue-wagging manner of some Trek characters, then at the very least will get something out of commercials! It sounds to me like the mental institute is a real sink-hole for taxpayer dollars for this to become noteworthy. Were I a mental health professional, I'd just ask the patient to help me learn Klingon.