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bobbyw24
03-29-2010, 09:50 AM
WASHINGTON — Texas is counting on the 2010 Census to deliver four new congressional districts, four new Electoral College votes in presidential elections, and millions of dollars in additional federal aid. But, as some elected officials are starting to worry, Uncle Sam can't deliver anything to the rapidly growing Sun Belt state unless Texas residents deliver their forms back to the government.

As of Friday afternoon, only 27 percent of Texas households had filled in and returned their census forms — well below the national average of 34 percent — according to computer data from the U.S. Census Bureau. In Harris County, the response rate is 23 percent. Houston's returns are running at 21 percent.

Contrary to historical trends, some of the toughest challenges facing the agency responsible for measuring the nation's population are not from counting the traditionally undercounted groups such as African-Americans and Latinos. Instead, a new and growing threat to an accurate national head count is coming from anti-government conservatives who may not fill out their forms to protest against “Big Brother” in Washington.

“There's a general distrust of the federal government at every level, starting with Congress and the president, all the way down to executive branch agencies,” says Rep. Mike Conaway, R-Midland.
Low return rates

Polling by the Pew Research Center finds Democrats are more likely than other Americans to view the census as “very important” to the country. Seventy-six percent of Democrats call this year's count very important, compared with 61 percent of Republicans and independents.

In Texas, some of the counties with the lowest census return rates are among the state's most Republican, including Briscoe County in the Panhandle, 8 percent; King County, near Lubbock, 5 percent; Culberson County, near El Paso, 11 percent; and Newton County, in deep East Texas, 18 percent. Most other counties near the bottom of the list are heavily Hispanic counties along the Texas-Mexico border.

There is a reason for the enthusiasm gap on the census: A number of prominent conservative and libertarian Republicans have been blasting the census for months.

Criticism from Ron Paul

Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., began the barrage last year when she asserted — incorrectly — that the information reported by Americans could be used for nefarious governmental ends, such as imprisonment in internment camps.

Earlier this month, Texas Rep. Ron Paul voted against a congressional resolution asking Americans to participate in the census.

“The invasive nature of the current census raises serious questions about how and why government will use the collected information,” the Lake Jackson Republican recently said. “It also demonstrates how the federal bureaucracy consistently encourages citizens to think of themselves in terms of groups, rather than as individual Americans. ”

Houston-area GOP lawmakers say anti-census feelings run deep among their constituents.

“People are concerned about the apparent intrusive nature of the census,” said Rep. Ted Poe, R-Humble. “People are very concerned that the government is going too far.”

Still, Poe said, he tells his concerned constituents that they should answer the census because “it's the law.”

What's more, he added, “it's very important for people to fill out the census because of reapportionment and redistricting — and Texas stands to gain four (House) seats.”

But Texas can only get those seats, and the congressional clout that comes with it, if Texans stand up to be counted. Any conservative revolt would only reduce the representation in conservative areas of the state, such as rural Texas and the outer rings of suburbs surrounding its largest cities.
Loss of seats and money

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/6932410.html

Indy Vidual
03-29-2010, 09:58 AM
So the senseless census is really very important?

FrankRep
03-29-2010, 10:23 AM
So the senseless census is really very important?
Only Constitutional question on the Census was: How many people are in your household?

That's it. Just answer that question.

Elle
03-29-2010, 10:37 AM
I'm sending mine back with a pocket Constitution, appropriate section highlighted.

Rael
03-29-2010, 11:41 AM
Just a ploy to trick people into participating.

jmdrake
03-29-2010, 11:44 AM
Just a ploy to trick people into participating.

Or maybe they hype is a ploy to get people not to participate in order to secure a stronger left wing bias in the house of representatives.

Matt Collins
03-29-2010, 11:47 AM
I'm sending mine back with a pocket Constitution, appropriate section highlighted.
Hey, you just "stole" my idea! ;):p

.

sevin
03-29-2010, 11:48 AM
Only Constitutional question on the Census was: How many people are in your household?

That's it. Just answer that question.

Agreed. You should send in the census, but only that question is important.

liberalnurse
03-29-2010, 11:53 AM
I kinda feel left out as we never received one. Same house for 20 years. Go figure. Friends say that they want to visit me personally that's why I didn't get one.:cool:

Vessol
03-29-2010, 12:01 PM
How dare people mistrust their government.

bobbyw24
03-29-2010, 12:14 PM
By TIM PADGETT / MIAMI Tim Padgett / Miami – 1 hr 39 mins ago

Hispanic advocates often tell the story of a Census Bureau worker who visits a Puerto Rican household in New York City's East Harlem neighborhood. Seeing the family's caramel complexion, the Census taker asks which race he should put down for them - white or black. To which the family answers: "Puerto Rican."

The story could substitute a Mexican-American family - or Colombian- or Nicaraguan-American ones for that matter - but the gist would be the same. Many, if not most, Hispanics in the U.S. think of their ethnicity (also known as Latino) not just in cultural terms but in a racial context as well. It's why more than 40% of Hispanics, when asked on the Census form in 2000 to register white or black as their race, wrote in "Other" - and they represented 95% of all the 15.3 million people in the U.S. who did so. (See the 25 most influential Hispanics in America.)

An even larger share of Hispanics, including my Venezuelan-American wife, is expected to report "Other," "Hispanic" or "Latino" in the race section of the 2010 census forms being mailed to U.S. homes this month. What makes it all the more confusing if not frustrating to them is that Washington continues to insist on those forms that "Hispanic origins are not races." If the Census Bureau lists Filipino and even Samoan as distinct races, Hispanics wonder why they - the product of half a millennium of New World miscegenation - aren't considered a race too. "It's a very big issue," says Angelo FalcÓn, president of the National Institute for Latino Policy in New York City and a community adviser to the Census. "A lot of Hispanics find the black-white option offensive, and they're asserting their own racial uniqueness." (See the making of Sonia Sotomayor.)

Nor are they alone. Arabs, who would seem to have an even stronger race claim than Hispanics do, are trumpeting their own write-in campaign because the Census by default counts them as white - and the bureau announced this week that it has no intention of changing that policy in 2010. Incredibly, the term Arab doesn't even appear on the census form, though other Asian ethnicities, like Indian, are listed as races. (Ironically, part of the problem is that Arab immigrants a century ago petitioned the Federal Government to be categorized as white to avoid discrimination. Today, Arab-American leaders realize how much that move has cost their community in terms of federal aid and legal clout.)

It's not easy being the Census agency for America's baroque melting pot. And to be fair, FalcÓn notes, the Census hasn't slighted Hispanics in this year's count. On the contrary, as if acknowledging that Hispanics are now the nation's largest minority, the bureau has given the group its own "Hispanic Origins" section. It even precedes the general race section on the questionnaire and, advocates say, promises to yield a more comprehensive tally of Hispanics for purposes of federal aid and civil rights protections. But many Hispanics are nonetheless irked when they go to the next section and find, yet again, that they're asked to identify themselves racially as white or black. (The other racial designations are Native
American, Asian and Pacific Islander.)

More at

http://news.yahoo.com/s/time/20100329/us_time/08599197588300

Sarge
03-29-2010, 12:19 PM
People need to read the form. The question to be answered is on April 1st, how many are living in your household. How can one send the form in before then and give an accurate answer?

It would seem that one would respond on April 1st or after and not before. A nothing burger until a week after April 1st.

If they wanted the form in sooner, they should have moved up the date.

Depressed Liberator
03-29-2010, 02:28 PM
Did they say Bachman is a libertarian republican?

j6p
03-29-2010, 02:50 PM
One less loon bat to worry about, Less Politicans