A lot of people seemed to think the census was this arbitrary thing, a department completely separate from all the others, & the census was designed to 'spy on' US citizens.
Actually, the Census Bureau is part of the US Dept. of Commerce, it's done to allocate how many seats a state gets in the US House of Representatives, & no, it isn't to spy on anyone.
A little secret: at the end of the day, all the Census Bureau wants to know is how many people were living in a given household as of April 15th of that particular year. If you really, really don't want to answer the census questions, nobody's going to drag you off to jail if you don't. Seriously.
I worked as a crew leader trainer & fill-in enumerator for the 2010 census.
Yep, don't answer what you don't want to. We like names & ages, too, but the form gets turned in regardless. But knowing there are x kids & x elderly helps funnel that money. Don't fill it in at all, and your district gets less money.
Get that money kids. Don't tell em what you feel isn't their business if you're so inclined. Up to you.
@Agatha Yep, totally. We didn't even care if people there were documented or not; wasn't our business.
We had a couple problematic enumerators we had to let go, but it wasn't a big problem. I worry that now there will be more emboldened MAGA enumerators who will bully people and get away with it.
@Agatha Ugh, MAGA thinking is like a nasty infection...
Oh! And unlike in the old days, neighbors and landlords can't answer the questions for the residents in question.
But I recommend answering, because every response is one more body that gets counted when they figure out how much representation a state gets in Congress. Which is hellaciously important, in a representative democratic republic.