It's still dialectical, however, like Gullah, and inappropriate as a
basis for standard English.  Further, use of the dialect effectively
condemns the user to a lower socio-economic status, which seems very unfair.
Upward mobility is usually preceded by change in language to that of the
upper group.  It almost seemed like the Ebonics movement was determined
to keep the poor in their place.
On Thu, 9 Mar 2000, sjm wrote:
  I think that trend to continue as long as social
activists try to promote
 gibberish as language, as the ebonics debacle. 
 I hate to be pedantic, but "Ebonics" really is called Black English
 Vernacular (BEV) by linguists, and has been a recognized form of
 spoken english by linguists for at least 30 years.  It was made most
 famous in Linguistics circles by William Lebov's paper "Language
 in the inner city: studies in the Black English Vernacular" in 1972.
 BEV follows strict rules of grammar and word use, and has syntactic
 roots in several major west African languages like Ewe, Iwo,
 and Yoruba.  It really is not gibberish at all, no matter how
 "wrong" it sounds to a native Standard American English speaker
 (me included).  In some ways, it actually allows much finer grained
 shades of meaning than SAE does.  In some ways, less.  That's how
 different languages work.  But the fact that it follows a definable
 complex grammar can't be debated, it's been studied to death by
 linguists everywhere.
 How the Oakland School Board was using BEV for its own purposes is
 an entirely different matter which I won't even begin to touch on.
 That's politics, not language.
 For a real thrill, try finding information on the dialect of English
 spoken on Ocracoke Island in North Carolina.  Although it's dying out
 now, there still remain a few native inhabitants of the island who
 can speak it.  They were mainly descended from Scottish immigrants
 who were more or less entirely cut off from the mainland when
 shipping lanes changed in the 18th century, and left to develop
 their own dialect and speech rules over the course of the next two
 hundred years.
 (Yes, I was a linguistics major.  No, I haven't done anything useful
 with it.  That's why I'm a programmer now.)
 -Seth
  
 
M. K. Peirce
Rhode Island Computer Museum, Inc.
215 Shady Lea Road,
North Kingstown, RI 02852
"Casta est qui nemo rogavit."
              - Ovid