Posts Tagged ‘surveillance’

Civil Disobedience and the American Community Survey

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

I got a visit from a federal agent last night.  Not law enforcement, but an official from the US Department of Commerce, specifically the Census Bureau. He was probably at the door to convince me that I needed to fill out the American Community Survey, which they sent to me twice, or to take down the answers himself.  I never gave him a chance to speak beyond identifying himself.

I told him what I had told the last Census Bureau employee who called my home, I consider the ACS to be a gross violation of my privacy rights, I will never fill it out and any further contact either by phone or in person would be considered harassment.  Apparently, the agent on the phone didn’t understand what I had said, for this other drone to be at my door.  Perhaps when I slammed the door in his face the message came across.

Now one might ask why it is that I object to the Census Bureau doing its job?  Because, frankly, it is not doing its job. Article I, Section 2 of the United States Constitution charges the House to make an enumeration of each state’s population, in order to determine the number of representatives that each state has in the House.  The wording is quite clear.

The actual Enumeration  shall be made within three Years after the first Meeting of the Congress of the United States, and within every subsequent Term of ten Years, in such Manner as they shall by Law direct.

Simple and to the point.  Count the state populations, once every ten years after the first enumeration.  My answer to them and the only information required, is the occupancy total of adults living in the home.

The American Community Survey is not only in violation of the ten year enumeration clause, as they are spoon feeding it out to about three percent of the population every year, but it requests data which is simply none of the government’s business! From the start, the questions are very personal and only get worse as you leaf through the 28 page document.

The first question which really stands out is asking for your name.  Then your birth date.

The question immediately following asks if you have Hispanic, Latino or Spanish ancestry and if so, from where?  Mexico?  Puerto Rico?  Cuba?

What is your race? White?  Black, African Am., or Negro?  American Indian or Alaska Native?  Asian Indian? Chinese? Etc.

Once you get done filling in all this for each occupant of the home, the survey continues to probe into your housing affairs.

What kind of house do you live in?

How many acres of land does the house sit on?

In the past 12 months, what were the actual sales of all agricultural products from this property?

How many rooms does the home have?

How many of them are bathrooms?

Does this house, apartment, or mobile home have – Hot and cold running water?  A flush toilet?  A bathtub or shower?  A sink with a faucet?  A stove or range?  A refrigerator?  Telephone service?

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

Which fuel is used most for heating this home?

What is your monthly electric bill?

What is the yearly cost of water and sewer?

What is the yearly cost of oil, coal, kerosene, wood, etc. for this home?

Do you own your home?

What is your rent or mortgage payment amount?

As if this wasn’t intrusive enough and clearly none of the government’s damn business, the personal questions about each household member becomes a nightmare of intrusive query.

For up to five members of the household, you are asked what kind of health insurance coverage you have.

Is this person deaf?

Is this person blind?

Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, does this person have serious difficulty concentrating, remembering, or making decisions?

Does this person have serious difficulty walking or climbing stairs?

Does this person have difficulty dressing or bathing?

Because of a physical, mental, or emotional condition, does this person have difficulty doing errands alone such as visiting a doctor’s office or shopping?

What is your marital status?

In the past 12 months did this person get – Married? Widowed? Divorced?

How many times has this person been married?

In what year did this person last get married?

Has this person given birth to any children in the past 12 months?

Last week, did this person work for pay at a job or business?

At what location did this person work last week? (They ask for the full address!)

How did this person usually get to work last week?  Car, truck or van?  Bus or trolley bus?  Streetcar or trolley car?  Subway or elevated?  Railroad?  Ferryboat?  Taxicab?  Motorcycle?  Bicycle?  Walked?  Worked at home?  Other method?

What time did this person usually leave home to go to work last week?

It goes on, and on, asking about all sources of income, from Social Security to Veteran’s Compensation – requesting specific totals.  If for one moment you might suggest that the information is anonymous, think again!  They specifically ask for your full name at the beginning section and again for each individual personal survey section.

You can find an informational copy of this document at the Census Bureau, along with their claim, “Response to both is required by law.” See for yourself that I make no exaggerated claims on this document’s intrusive questioning.

The Census Bureau agent on the phone also claimed that I was required by law to fill out the ACS and send it in.  I can believe that I am required to enumerate the members of my household for the standard ten year census, though I haven’t looked up the code.  Perhaps they even have added the ACS to the required list.  But a law which violates my right to privacy, in violation of the Constitution itself, is not a law I am willing to obey.

It’s called civil disobedience, and in the case of the American Community Survey, I feel such a treatment is perfectly validated.

Following are links to other articles, videos and related material concerning the ACS:

Stop the American Community Survey Petition

The Census is Getting Personal

The Thought Police and the American Community Survey

Uncle Sam’s Way Too Nosy Survey

The US Census Bureau’s American Community Survey Interrogation

Civil Disobedience and the Census

The Census, the Constitution, and Civil Disobedience

The Road to Dictatorship

Wednesday, March 3rd, 2010

No introduction needed, just read this article by Justin Raimondo, and follow the many links within.

Obama Wants to Continue to Spy On You

Sunday, January 25th, 2009

More lack of change, and this one is ugly.  The Obama Administration has been putting pressure on the court to set aside a ruling in favor of the plaintiffs, who are attempting to sue the government over illegal wire tapping.  Rather than rehash the whole thing, just read these two articles at Wired.  One and Two.

Big Obama is Watching You…

Police State America

Friday, December 28th, 2007

I could add my two cents to this issue, but such would be redundant. Stephen Lendman has done the work for me. Rather than bore you with a re-hash of the information, just read his original article. It is very sobering and very frightening.

Reading, Writing and Waterboarding

Friday, December 28th, 2007

How do you know when you’ve gone too far? How to you recognize when your push for “security” is a thinly veiled excuse for tyranny? When you go for the children.

The stake through the heart of the USA has continued its plunge with a hefty hammer blow from Maryland’s Joppatowne High School, the first Maryland school to offer coursework to support the “anti-terrorism industry.” As the lead line in the USA Today article reads, “Call it vocational education for the 9/11 generation.”

That’s right, this Maryland school has not only enacted a three year course for training kids in the vocation of “Homeland Security”, but other Maryland schools and schools districts across the USA are actually attracted to it and looking to emulate it. The result, a new generation of kids who will be programmed to be paranoid snitches, even if they don’t go to work for the Homeland Security Department.

We’ve seen this kind of tactic before. They were called “Hitler-Jungen”, where children were drawn in under the concept of “securing the fatherland” in order to train and recruit for the Sturmabteilung of the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei. Or in English, the Hitler Youth of the Storm Regiment of the Nazi Party. How long will it be before Homeland Security courses follow suit and become mandatory curriculum for students?

I have to ask, why is it necessary to offer high school courses for Homeland Security? What gain is there, other than to indoctrinate students into a mindset that they wouldn’t necessarily have otherwise? The vast majority of high schools have no curriculum for basic law enforcement techniques used by police, so why is it at all needed to teach “anti-terrorism” courses? Last, but certainly not least, what does it say about us that “anti-terrorism” has become a major growth industry?

People, wake up! This is how horrible things start. No good can come of this. As a nation we are paralleling late 1930′s Germany in so many frightening ways that it’s enough to make your head spin.

For once, can we learn from history and not repeat the same mistakes? Please?

Big Brother, Live

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

We have a whole new generation of sheep coming out of Amerika’s schools these days. Most students have been placid and pliable over the last half a century, but it has gotten to the point that they would rather give up all personal privacy, their very inalienable rights for that matter, in order to feel safe. My guess is that they couldn’t list their actual rights if they were pressed to, let alone understand their importance to a free society.

The latest test bed of managing the herd comes from New Jersey, where at least one school now has complete camera surveillance, fed live to the police, during all school activity. Big Brother is watching you, watching Telescreen. Only this isn’t a joke.

“I would want the police to be there right away if something happened to our school. Especially with all these bomb scares happening now, I know the high school had a couple,” says one student.

I’ve got news for you little lamb, the police won’t be there. They’ll see it happen, but they won’t be there. They’ll be hanging around outside, waddling their fat asses around sheltered barriers, while they wait to see what happens. Just like they did at Columbine. Just like they did at Virginia Tech. You see, they want to go home to their families and they can’t do that if they risk their lives for you. “To serve and protect” is just a motto. You cannot hold the police responsible for failing to protect you. The Supreme Court has ruled that unanimously in over fourteen cases to date. You’re on your own, whether you realize it or not.

Anyone who believes that having the police monitor your every move somehow makes you safer, is living in a dream world. The best it provides is the ability to gather evidence against the people that killed you. In the meantime you’re living your life as a lab rat, confined, controlled and monitored.

Don’t bother making a fuss about it. Take your Ritilan and shut up.