What law did it cite and what was the return address?
What was return address?
Can please scan it up and make it available?
Can please scan it up and make it available?
I just changed my name to Guillermo Borrego...(a White Hispanic) a few days ago.
‘’I throw away every piece of mail that is not addressed to myself or my family personally.’’ Worst case is that someone comes knocking on your door (not going to happen) and asks you to complete the survey (which you refuse as you have no way to verify who this idiot is, and you require them to mail you a survey with your name on it, which they won’t do either...)
I toss the same mail whenever I get it.
As long as your name isn’t Resident I think you can ignore it safely.
"You'll tell us everything. Yes, I know you will."
Respond with fire.
A family member also received that form in NY, requiring him to make available details of the size of his house, number of people in residence, utilities and all sorts of other data. He was led to believe it was about relocation of refugees from NYC in case of some future calamity.
The last census I just ignored the same survey. They kept sending different people to my house, I wouldn’t answer the door. One Saturday one of these ladies approached me while I was doing yard work in the front. I just pretended she didn’t exist; they had no training on how to deal with someone who wouldn’t even acknowledge their existence.
I heard that the American Community Survey was a survey instrument developed by the Obama administration in order to keep track of population trends, demographic and geographic shifts, citizens’ political thoughts, addresses in order to send Obama campaign mailings and an address database of those who oppose the Obama regime so that they can be relocated when necessary.
Anything I get addressed to “Resident” is junk mail. All junk mail I receive goes in the trash at the Post Office. However, if I receive one of these, I’m going to forward it to Dingy “The Junk Mail Junkie” Harry Reid. I read that he has a thing for junk mail. He says that junk mail helps him keep in touch with the little people in the REAL world.
Yes. This winter, the Census Bureau sent me a letter informing me that they would send me a survey. A week later, they sent another letter informing me that they had sent a survey. A month later, they sent me another letter requesting that I return the survey that they had sent. A few weeks later still, the survey actually arrived (naturally in Spanish, not my native English). After collecting the required information, I completed the survey as best I could and sent it back. Then the survey arrived in English, which I did not complete, fearing that the Census Bureau would find some discrepancy between my Spanish and English responses. The Census Bureau curiously has not contacted me for further questioning.