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The poverty data Bush doesn't want you to see
http://www.thecarpetbaggerreport.com...es/002414.html The Wall Street Journal reported last week that the Census Bureau will release government data on the poverty rate tomorrow. Not surprisingly, after years of progress on moving American families out of poverty in the 1990s, the Bureau's data is expected to show another increase under Bush. That's the predictable part. The suspicious part has to do with the timing of the announcement. Every year, the Census Bureau releases the poverty data in late-September. In election years, that means the public learns about the number of families in poverty about five weeks before going to the polls. This year -- surprise, surprise -- the announcement has been moved up to August, when Congress is out of session, a lot of journalists are on vacation, and the Olympics are on TV. The Wall Street Journal reported: A bureau representative says the date change has nothing to do with politics. No, of course not, what ever could have given us that idea? Indeed, it's not suspicious at all that the Census Bureau changed the date and the location of the announcement to a harder-to-reach office. Instead of using the traditional National Press Club in downtown DC, where the numbers have been released in years past, the poverty data announcement will be made from Census Bureau offices in Suitland, Md., far from reporters' offices. And adding insult to injury, we're not supposed to be the slightest bit skeptical about the fact that every year, the numbers have been released by a career Census official -- until this year, when the data will be announced by the bureau's director, a political appointee of the Bush White House. While Congressional Democrats emphasize that the director, Charles Kincannon, has always treated them fairly and honestly, the change added to the feeling that some kind of hijinks was going on. "A political appointee should not be delivering such a significant statistic, because it opens the Census Bureau to charges of spinning statistics for political purposes," said Rep. Carolyn Maloney (D-N.Y.). Given the circumstances, it's easy to forgive the Dems for being a little cynical. "I don't put anything past this administration," said Rep. William Lacy Clay (D-Mo.), the ranking member on the Government Relations subcommittee on technology, information policy, intergovernmental relations and the Census. "These people will stoop to any level to accomplish their goals -- and right now that goal is to re-elect Bush." The data will be available, quietly or not, tomorrow afternoon [fri 8/26]. We'll see how much attention it gets and whether the administration's scheme worked. |
#2
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In article ,
"Jack" wrote: The poverty data Bush doesn't want you to see Snip You are just a liberal moron. You made one on topic post and the rest are liberal BS posts. Go away Troll. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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