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On Census Day, we all count the same

Posted 8:00AM on Tuesday 24th March 2020 ( 4 years ago )

I filled out my Census form over the weekend, and I’m not ashamed to admit I was excited about it. I like the Census. It’s fair. At least once every 10 years, everybody in America is equal. We all count the same. One.

On Census Day, for instance, I’m equal to Brad Pitt. 

Imagine that. Brad Pitt, with his eleventy billion dollars in the bank, his pretty-boy good looks and the phone numbers of every supermodel and actress in Hollywood, is equal to li’l ol’ Mitch Clarke, who has $42.50 in his checking account and doesn’t know any supermodels or actresses, unless you count my friend who occasionally performs in community theater.

The U.S. Constitution requires that, every 10 years, the government counts the number of people living here. Quite a few people have a problem with this. They argue that the Census Bureau’s forms and its companion, the American Community Survey, invade our privacy by asking questions that are none of the government’s business. 

They ask us questions about how much we paid for our house. They ask how much money we make. They ask questions about our mental and physical stability. 

I understand those concerns. I don’t like anyone, especially the government, butting into my business. 

On the other hand, answers given to the census and the American Community Survey give us important statistics that will help us better understand the American way of life. It also is the only way I know to get answers to a few burning questions that have been gnawing at me.

For instance: 

http://accesswdun.com/article/2020/3/889105/on-census-day-we-all-count-the-same

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