-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

Subject:
                 Fold, spindle, and mutilate.

3/16/00

Every complex system can be easily overcome. Because it requires high
maintenance and not maintaining it can bring down a complex system.
Violence is unnecessary. Public participation is VITAL in the
following categories.

Taxes
Elections
Military
Census

They say that the census is for our benefit. But it is not.
They say the census will help the poor but his is the government
that works for big business and threw the poor off of welfare
while keeping corporations on the dole.

State governments sell private information to businesses.

They say they will keep the information confidential.
How gullible does one need to be to think that corporations
won't get access to this information?

What kind of democracy is this where so many of us so distrust
our own government.

It's not a democracy. It's a plutocracy. For that reason we are
justified in doing so.

In nature the ultimate power is always with the many. This is
why elites need to divide to conquer. The least we can do for
ourselves is to not assist them in our own enslavement.

Joshua2
==========

XXXXX DRUDGE REPORT XXXXX WED MARCH 15 2000 21:52:09 ET XXXXX

CENSUS BREAKDOWN: CITIZENS TELL SAM TO SHOVE IT OVER PROBING
QUESTIONS; WILL
PAY FINE

Americans from coast to coast are expressing shock and outrage over
the level
of detailed questioning from the federal government and the 2000
Census, with
thousands of citizens vowing to pay fines rather than submit to the
private
nature of the inquisition, according to congressional sources.

"The census count is already breaking down," said one Hill source.
"People
are in revolt! Calls are flooding into our office... They are very
upset
about the intrusive nature of the questions, such as how a person gets
to
work, whether they have any disabilities, how many cars they own, what
their
income was and who they work for!"

The Constitution of the United States grants the government authority
to
count population, but a "long form" being sent to 1 out of 6 American
households strays far from that goal; requiring answers to more than
53
personal questions or risk penalty.

U.S. Code, Title 13, Section 221 states citizens must fully comply
with the
census or face a $100 fine. There is a $500 penalty for giving false
information.

Census officials received more than 600,000 phone calls on Tuesday,
according
to officials. The majority of the callers lodged complaints about the
probing
nature of the census questions.

And thousands of calls to Capitol Hill took staffers by surprise.

"It's a firestorm," said one congressional aide.

"Is this Al Gore's idea of 'reinventing government?'" one angry caller
complained to a receptionist for a besieged senator. "I have to tell
Washington how I got to work last week? In what type of car? And the
location
of my office? Screw it. I'll pay the 100 bucks!"

Congressmen on Wednesday were referring complaints to the Census
Hotline
[1-800-471-9424].

A cover letter accompanying the long form states that no one will have
access
to the information other than the Census Bureau. Yet many questions
appear to
violate a citizen's right to privacy:

10. What is this person's ancestry or ethnic origin?

11. a. Does this person speak a language other than English at home?
b. What
is this language? c. How well does this person speak English?

12. Where was this person born?

13. Is this person a citizen of the United States?

14. When did this person come to live in the United States?

15. a. Did this person live in this house or apartment 5 years ago? b.
Where
did this person live 5 years ago?

16. Does this person have any of the following long-lasting
conditions:
blindness deafness or a severe vision or hearing impairment? A
condition that
substantially limits one or more basic physical activities such as
walking,
climbing stairs, reaching, lifting or carrying?

18. Was this person under 15 years of age on April 1, 2000?

19. Does this person have any of his/her own grandchildren under the
age of
18 living in this house or apartment? Is this grandparent currently
responsible for most of the basic needs of any grandchildren under the
age of
18 who lives in this house or apartment? How long has this grandparent
been
responsible fort these grandchildren?

22. At what location did this person work LAST WEEK?

23. How did this person usually get to work LAST WEEK?

24. What time did this person usually leave home to go to work LAST
WEEK?

25. LAST WEEK, was this person on layoff from a job? LAST WEEK, was
this
person TEMPORARILY absent from a job or business? Has this person been
informed that he or she will be recalled to work within the next 6
months or
been given a date to return to work?

27. Industry or Employer -- Describe clearly this person's chief job
activity
or business last week. If this person had more than one job, describe
the one
at which this person worked the most hours. If this person had no job
or
business last week, give the information for his/her last job or
business
since 1995. For whom did this person work? What kind of business or
industry
was this? Is this mainly manufacturing? wholesale trade? retail trade?
Other
(agriculture, construction, service, government, etc.)

31. Income in 1999: Wages salary, commissions, bonuses or tips from
all jobs;
Self-employment from own non-farm businesses, including
proprietorships and
partnerships; Interest dividends, net income, royalty income, or
income from
estates and trusts.

32. What was this person's total income in 1999?

Questions 33 through 42 deal with type of housing, whether someone
rents or
owns, and how many bedrooms, whether there are plumbing facilities,
etc.

43. How many automobiles, vans, and trucks of one-ton capacity or less
are
kept at home for use by members of your household?

46. What is monthly rent? Does the monthly rent include any meals?

47. Do you have a mortgage, deed of trust, contract to purchase or
similar
debt on this property? How mush is your regular monthly mortgage
payment on
this property? Does your regular monthly mortgage payment include
payments
for real estate taxes on this property? Does your regular monthly
mortgage
payment include payments for fire, hazard, or flood insurance on this
property?

48. Do you have a second mortgage or a home equity loan on this
property? How
much is your regular monthly payment on all second or junior mortgages
and
all home equity loans on this property?

49. What were the real estate taxes on this property last year?

50. What was the annual payment for fire, hazard and flood insurance
on this
property?

51. What is the value of this property; that is how much do you think
this
house and lot, apartment or mobile home and lot would sell for if it
were for
sale?

***

One out of 100 households are to receive an even more detailed
questionnaire,
The American Community Survey. That form requires answers on
"physical,
mental, or emotional conditions lasting 6 months or more."

Developing...
===============


INDEPENDENT (London)

By Mary Dejevsky in Washington

17 March 2000

When Census 2000 forms started arriving in post boxes across the
United
States this week, the authorities were braced for trouble. But
eventhey
were taken aback by the scale of the response.

Within 24 hours of the first deliveries, Census Bureau officials had
more
than 600,000 calls, the majority of them complaints about the probing
nature of the questions on race. Phone lines to Congressmen and
government
departments were jammed and plans to bring in thousands more staff in
May
to process the returns were speeded up for immediate implementation.

This is a two-tier census. Five out of six households are receiving a
white, orange and black form that contains only eight questions, but
might
seem, to non-white Americans, to betray an unhealthy preoccupation
with
race.

After asking for the phone number, sex and age of all those in the
household, question 7 asks suddenly: "Is Person 1
Spanish/Hispanic/Latino?" with supplementary boxes for "Yes" that
include
Mexican, Puerto Rican, Cuban or other Spanish/Hispanic/Latino.
Question 8
gives three "colour" options: white, black, American Indian/Alaska
native,
followed by 11 ethnic options, most of them Asian and the option of
writing in something else.

One in six households, however, are receiving a 53-question census.
Here,
which is where the most indignant complaints have originated, the
questions include enquires on income, employment, and method of
getting to
work. One Senator said he had taken a call from a constituent that
went
like this: "Is this Al Gore's idea of 'reinventing government'? I have
to
tell Washington how I got to work? In what type of car? And the
location
of my office? Screw it, I'll pay the hundred bucks."

That is the fine for refusing to answer the questions  low enough, if
enough people object to the questions, to defeat the whole operation.

The fine for answering dishonestly is $500 (318), but there is no hint
of
how the answers will be checked unless one of the cardinal principles
of
Census 2000, the guarantee that the information will not reach any
other
government department, is violated.

The long form of the census also asks for the language spoken in the
household, how well people speak English, whether they are US
citizens,
mortgage arrangements, and physical or mental disabilities. All the
questions, but especially those on ethnic origin, are the product of
hard
bargaining in government offices and Congressional committees.

The Director of the Census Bureau, Kenneth Pruitt, said yesterday that
he
expected the head-count to document how much America "has become a
microcosm" of the world as its leading multi-racial society.

But the purpose is not just to compile a demographic portrait of the
United States on 1 April, 2000. It will also determine allocation of
government money and Congressional representation.

The authorities in Georgia take the selfish approach. Send in your
forms,
they plead, "or Georgia money will be educating New York children for
another 10 years". Georgia believes it missed out on federal funding
because its population was under-counted in 1990.

Any large-scale civil disobedience over the census will fuel calls for
using more estimates next time. The past year has witnessed arguments
between those -  mostly Democrats -  who believe poor people and
recent
immigrants are wrongly missed in census counts, and those  mostly
Republicans  who argue that a census must count real people, and if
people
decline to be counted or are simply missed, that is their problem.

======================

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