>From the press release:

All census information collected, including addresses, are confidential
and protected by law. By law, the Census Bureau cannot share
respondents' answers with the FBI, the IRS, CIA, Welfare,
Immigration, or any other government agency. No court of law or law
enforcement agency can find out respondents' answers. All Census
Bureau employees — including temporary employees — take an oath
for life to keep census information confidential. Any violation of that
oath is punishable by a fine of up to $250,000  and five years in
prison.


To know just how serious this pledge of confidentiality is, just ask any
Japanese family who lived in this country during the early 1940s. As for
the penalties, ask the government employees who were punished for
violating their oath—if you can identify one!

Trust me, I'm from....



--- In LibertarianEnterprise@yahoogroups.com, Frank Ney <n4...@...>
wrote:
>
> On Thu, 07 May 2009 06:53:56 -0600, Wraith wra...@... wrote:
>
>
>http://www.census.gov/Press-Release/www/releases/archives/2010_census/0\
13441.html
> >
> >Interesting things could be done with such a GPS list of homes.
>
> Tyrannical things could be done with such a GPS list of homes.
>
> Makes it easier for UN Troops to gather up the unmutual.
>
> Frank Ney  N4ZHG  NY/EMT-B  NRA(L) GOA CCRKBA JPFO ProvNRA LPWV
> --
> CPUs execute their instructions in synchonization with the "ticking"
of
> an internal clock.  This kind of thing isn't unusual in the real
world.
> Musicians play their music at the tempo dictated by the baton of a
> conductor or the "ticking" of a metronome.  Greek slaves used to row
the
> oars of their trireme warships in time with the drum beats. 
Politicians
> spend money at 1.5 times the rate at which they can get their hands on
it.
> You get the idea.
>             - Gary Cutler, "A Buyers and Builders Guide to Windows
PCs"
>

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