Dayton Daily News

Counterpoi­nt: There’s reason to be skeptical

- By Matthew Feeney Matthew Feeney is the director of the Cato Institute’s Project on Emerging Technologi­es. He wrote this for InsideSour­ces.com.

This year the Census Bureau will begin conducting the constituti­onally required census, which takes place every 10 years. Many readers will dutifully fill out the forms, informing the bureau about their household and providing researcher­s with data. In May, the bureau will begin visiting those who haven’t responded to the census.

But why wouldn’t someone want to contribute to social science and an accurate head count? The history of the census provides ample evidence to justify such reluctance.

The census sounds harmless enough. In a representa­tive democracy like the United States where seats in at least part of the legislatur­e are determined by population, it’s important to know how many people live in the country and where they live. The framers of the Constituti­on codified the decennial census as the mechanism for determinin­g the number of seats each state occupies in the House of Representa­tives. Yet the informatio­n included in the census has been used to violate civil liberties, and it would be a mistake to assume similar abuses won’t occur again.

Government­s often overreact in the wake of a crises, and a crucial feature of such overreacti­ons is the collection and analysis of informatio­n. During the first Red Scare, a 24-year-old J. Edgar Hoover was put in charge of the so-called “Anti Radical Division” formed by the

Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer after a string of anarchist bombings. Hoover, who previously worked at the Library of Congress, used his librarian skills in his hunt for aliens to deport. His team assembled hundreds of thousands of index cards associated with not only individual­s but publicatio­ns and organizati­ons. These notecards aided Department of Justice officials, who conducted the so-called Palmer Raids in late 1919 and early 1920. The raids resulted in thousands of people being arrested without warrants, hundreds of whom were deported.

Such zeal for data collection was not isolated to the first Red Scare. Other crises have resulted in increased informatio­n gathering. And one of the best sources of informatio­n available to the government is the census.

After the Japanese navy’s air service bombed the U.S. Navy base at Pearl Harbor in December 1941, military officials reached for the census to facilitate one of the most shameful civil liberty abuses in American history: the internment of Japanese-Americans. A few months after the attack, President Franklin D. Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066. The order authorized the secretary of war to exclude those considered national security risks from designated military areas. As result, 120,000 people of Japanese descent — the majority of whom were U.S. citizens — were moved into internment camps.

Census officials denied that the bureau had assisted Japanese internment. But in 2000 historian Margo Anderson of the University of Wisconsin and Fordham University statistici­an William

Seltzer uncovered evidence that Census Bureau officials provided informatio­n on whereabout­s of people with Japanese ancestry. In 2000, the Census Bureau director apologized, but only a few years after the apology the bureau was aiding the surveillan­ce of another minority group.

In August 2002 and December 2003, the Census Bureau put together tabulation­s of Arab-Americans for Customs and Border Protection. These tabulation­s included informatio­n on how many Arab-Americans lived in specific ZIP codes. The creation of these tabulation­s was a small part of the U.S. government’s broader overreacti­on to the 9/11 terrorist attacks, which resulted in widespread and needless infringeme­nts on civil liberties.

We should expect that in response to the next crisis officials won’t be shy about seeking census data. This risk is more pronounced when the targets of government surveillan­ce come from broad groups such as “Japanese-Americans” or “Arab-Americans.”

Future administra­tions will have different targets. Given that anyone could one day be on the receiving end of government surveillan­ce, it behooves us to be hesitant to volunteer intimate details about our families.

Refusing to accurately complete a census form is against the law and could result in a fine. Fortunatel­y, the Department of Justice is hesitant to pursue census refusal cases.

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