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None
of Your Business!
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
by Rep. Ron Paul, MD
You
may not have heard of the American Community Survey, but you will.
The national census, which historically is taken every ten years,
has expanded to quench the federal bureaucracys ever-growing
thirst to govern every aspect of American life. The new survey,
unlike the traditional census, is taken each and every year at a
cost of hundreds of millions of dollars. And its not brief.
It contains 24 pages of intrusive questions concerning matters that
simply are none of the governments business, including your
job, your income, your physical and emotional heath, your family
status, your dwelling, and your intimate personal habits.
The
questions are both ludicrous and insulting. The survey asks, for
instance, how many bathrooms you have in your house, how many miles
you drive to work, how many days you were sick last year, and whether
you have trouble getting up stairs. It goes on and on, mixing inane
questions with highly detailed inquiries about your financial affairs.
One can only imagine the countless malevolent ways our federal bureaucrats
could use this information. At the very least the survey will be
used to dole out pork, which is reason enough to oppose it.
Keep
in mind the survey is not voluntary, nor is the Census Bureau asking
politely. Americans are legally obligated to answer, and can be
fined up to $1,000 per question if they refuse!
I
introduced an amendment last week that would have eliminated funds
for this intrusive survey in a spending bill, explaining on the
House floor that perhaps the American people dont appreciate
being threatened by Big Brother. The amendment was met by either
indifference or hostility, as most members of Congress either dont
care about or actively support government snooping into the private
affairs of citizens.
One
of the worst aspects of the census is its focus on classifying people
by race. When government tells us it wants information to help
any given group, it assumes every individual who shares certain
physical characteristics has the same interests, or wants the same
things from government. This is an inherently racist and offensive
assumption. The census, like so many federal policies and programs,
inflames racism by encouraging Americans to see themselves as members
of racial groups fighting each other for a share of the federal
pie.
The
census also represents a form of corporate welfare, since the personal
data collected on hundred of millions of Americans can be sold to
private businesses. Surely business enjoys having such extensive
information available from one source, but its hardly the
duty of taxpayers to subsidize the cost of market research.
At
least the national census has its origins in the Constitution, which
is more than one can say about the vast majority of programs funded
by Congress. Still, Article I makes it clear that the census should
be taken every ten years for the sole purpose of congressional redistricting
(and apportionment of taxes, prior to the disastrous 16th amendment).
This means a simple count of the number of people living in a given
area, so that numerically equal congressional districts can be maintained.
The founders never authorized the federal government to continuously
survey the American people.
More
importantly, they never envisioned a nation where the people would
roll over and submit to every government demand. The American Community
Survey is patently offensive to all Americans who still embody that
fundamental American virtue, namely a healthy mistrust of government.
The information demanded in the new survey is none of the governments
business, and the American people should insist that Congress reject
it now before it becomes entrenched.
July
13, 2004
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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