October 08, 2009 Crime, Census and Censorship
There are serious problems with the administration of
the U.S. census. Americans have good reason to be wary
of the
stranger's knock on the door.
Unfortunately, anything critics say about the
federal census
can and will be used against them in the court of
left-wing opinion.
First, the disturbing news about the government's most
recent census travails: According to a new General
Accounting Office report, botched fingerprinting by
ill-trained employees led to the hiring of some 36,000
census workers with insufficient background checks.
"More than 200"
of those workers may have had serious criminal records,
according to the GAO. The investigators revealed that:
"…of the prints that could be processed, fingerprint
results identified approximately 1,800 temporary workers
(1.1 percent of total hires) with criminal records that
name check alone failed to identify. Approximately 750
(42 percent) (of those) were terminated or were further
reviewed because the Bureau determined their criminal
records—which included crimes such as
rape,
manslaughter
and
child abuse—disqualified
them from census employment."[Census
Bureau Continues to Make Progress in Mitigating Risks to
a Successful Enumeration, but Still Faces Various
Challenges]
Gulp. This comes on the heels of the Census Bureau's
admission that it is uncertain of the final cost of the
2010 decennial census, and that it faces ongoing
problems with handheld computers used to collect data.
The failure of the handheld devices will increase census
costs by up to $3 billion, officials told a House
subcommittee last month. On top of that, NewMajority.com
blogger Tim Mak points out, the bureau is grappling with
cost overruns of nearly $90 million
related to verifying its address list.
Then there's the troubling alliance between the Census
Bureau and the aggressively partisan
Service Employees International Union—whose
many leading officials and
organizing tactics
are inextricably intertwined with the disgraced
personnel and methods of the ACORN community organizing
racket.
GOP Congressmen Peter Roskam, Patrick McHenry and Mark
Kirk pointed out in a
letter
to Census Director Robert Groves that the SEIU donated
more than $4 million to ACORN in 2006-07. ACORN founder
Wade Rathke, who covered up his brother's million-dollar
embezzlement of ACORN funds, is the
"Founder and
Chief Organizer" of SEIU Local 100. In Chicago, SEIU
Locals 1 and 880 have contributed $230,000 to ACORN
groups in Illinois and Texas. Many of their offices are
co-located.
Given "SEIU's
intimate financial relationship with ACORN," which
the Census dropped from its partnership contracts after
last month's prostitution sting video fiasco,
"you should take
action to protect the public from the corruption of the
2010 census," the GOP critics wrote. Their warning
has gone unheeded.
Instead, Groves, the SEIU and several pro-illegal
amnesty groups recently
launched
"a historic campaign"
to
target
"the estimated 50 million Latinos living in the United
States."
Inclusion of the massive illegal alien population has
resulted in a radical
redrawing of the electoral map.
More people
equals more seats.
More illegal immigrants counted equals more power—for
ethnic lobbyists, Big Labor and the Democratic Party.
Alas, watchdogs can't call attention to the
politicization of the census enumeration process and its
bureaucratic woes too loudly.
Three weeks ago, a part-time census worker was found
murdered in rural Kentucky.
Bill Sparkman
was tied to a tree by the neck (his feet touching the
ground when discovered), and the word
"fed" had been scrawled on his chest with a felt-tip pen. Police are
still investigating and haven't ruled out three
possibilities: suicide, accidental death or homicide.
"We're not
responding to any of the speculation, the innuendo or
the rumors," Don Trosper, spokesman for the Kentucky
State Police,
told the Christian Science Monitor
last week. "The
Kentucky State Police concerns itself with facts."
But this hasn't stopped
rabid opportunists
from convicting outspoken conservatives in the media of
the unresolved crime/non-crime/incident.
The Atlantic's Andrew Sullivan immediately fingered
"Southern populist terrorism, whipped up by the GOP and
its Fox and talk-radio cohorts."
Author Richard Benjamin acknowledged that the area where
Sparkman died is an infamous drug haven, but zeroed in
on
"anti-government bile"
as his favored culprit. Benjamin singled out GOP Rep.
Michele Bachmann of Minnesota for her criticism of ACORN
and the Census.
"Progressive"
talk-show host Stephanie Miller
blamed
the Tea Party movement for inciting violence. Echoing
the unhinged liberal base,
New York magazine indicted conservative talk-radio giant Rush
Limbaugh and other
"conservative media personalities, websites and even
members of Congress."
They did this with
abortionist
George Tiller's
shooting
in Kansas, the
Holocaust Museum shooting
in Washington, D.C., and the
Binghamton
immigration center
shooting
in New York. Motives had yet to be determined and bodies
were still warm, but that did not stop the liberal
stampede from redefining conservative political
expression as an incitement to violence.
This cynical move to demonize criticism of the census is
part of a larger drive by the left to muzzle
limited-government advocates at every opportunity. Who
needs the Fairness Doctrine? The criminalization of
conservative dissent
is well underway. COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Michelle Malkin
[email
her]
is the author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our
Shores.
Click
here
for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here
for Michelle Malkin's website. Michelle Malkin
is also author of
Unhinged: Exposing Liberals Gone Wild
and the just-released Culture of Corruption: Obama and his Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks & Cronies. |