Posted by ChaiFeng on April 18, 2010 12:09 AM|Permalink
Comments
I believe that everyone are going to be welcomed back again with open arms into the friends and family of America. Slave owners and slaves will embrace in a very spirit of mutual like and caring. Come join us in this new America.
Been reading your weblog for any although now and so i believed I would finally drop a comment. Lately I've become addicted to blogs I believe. I will start reading a little and prior to I know it half the day is gone. I enjoy exploring all you have in your site, just amazed how infinite the topics could be out there.
Why you were visiting these Nations, did anyone question the use of the phrase "American Indian"? I realize that you went to the National Congress of "American Indians", however, there are many other terms that can be used to more accurately describe the people who truly are the only original Americans.
To me, an American Indian would be some who is from India who now lives in America. Terms like Aboriginal, First Nation and Native American are much more accurate terms to describe the original inhabitants of this land.
Using the phrase American Indian reminds me of narrow-minded Cowboy and "Indian" movies where Native Americans were depicted as the savage enemy. It was inaccurate back then and it is still inaccurate now. The term American Indian is something that is used all too often by all Americans. Prior to marrying a Native American, I often used that term as well. Since then, I have realized just how ignorant I, and many others are when it comes to understanding the original inhabitants of these lands. Unfortunately, had I not married an Native American, I am certain that I would still be suffering from the same ignorance and your Census would have re-enforced my ignorance. I believe that by using the term American Indian on such a widely distributed document you have done the Native American community a great disservice and, sadly, have revealed the lack of respect that the majority of Americans have towards the individuals who are truly the first Americans.
I have seen Native American on many other forms in which Nationality is a question. I don't see why it was not used on the Census. If you were worried about confusing people with "Native American" or Aboriginal or First Nation, you would only be confusing those who that answer did not apply. Anyone who identifies themselves as Native American, Aboriginal, or First Nation would not be confused by the terminology. I hope that future documents will label Native Americans appropriately. I just hope that the real American Indians (from India) did not get confused by your terminology and have now skewed the results for Native Americans.
I like this website very much, Its a real nice position to read and find information. "The world began without man, and it will complete itself without him." by Claude Levi-Strauss.
Resources like the one you mentioned here will be really useful to me! I will publish a link to this page on my blog. I'm positive my visitors will locate that very useful.
If I forget to turn the sound off on my phone I have the same problem. Loud music comes on in the middle of class and I have to awkwardly rush to turn it off.
The census doesn't seem to be correct, in my opinion. Like others have said, they can lie. I didn't even get a census card in the mail? I am not sure what the fix would be though. I guess they could just pull the data from drivers license?
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Harikrishnan
Lois,
Individuals who received the so-called "long form" during Census 2000 would recognize the American Community Survey (ACS). The ACS is simply a new way of collecting the same detailed socioeconomic and housing characteristics data that have been part of the census for decades and, in some cases even, centuries. Unlike the old long form, the ACS is an ongoing survey; data are collected throughout the year and throughout the decade.
About 19 million households received the long form in 2000; about 3 million receive the ACS annually. Collecting the data throughout the decade allows for the release of updated statistics annually. Without the ACS, policymakers and others who require data for informed decisionmaking would have to rely on data that is years out of date. As part of the official census, the ACS is mandatory even if you are one of the relatively few households that receives the ACS in 2010.
I've no doubt if he definitely applies himself; he can have a very very long a fruitful career in both the Food stuff services or Janitorial fields....
Comments
I believe that everyone are going to be welcomed back again with open arms into the friends and family of America. Slave owners and slaves will embrace in a very spirit of mutual like and caring. Come join us in this new America.
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Been reading your weblog for any although now and so i believed I would finally drop a comment. Lately I've become addicted to blogs I believe. I will start reading a little and prior to I know it half the day is gone. I enjoy exploring all you have in your site, just amazed how infinite the topics could be out there.
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Posted by: Brendan Manzanares | November 8, 2012 5:33 PM
Why you were visiting these Nations, did anyone question the use of the phrase "American Indian"? I realize that you went to the National Congress of "American Indians", however, there are many other terms that can be used to more accurately describe the people who truly are the only original Americans.
To me, an American Indian would be some who is from India who now lives in America. Terms like Aboriginal, First Nation and Native American are much more accurate terms to describe the original inhabitants of this land.
Using the phrase American Indian reminds me of narrow-minded Cowboy and "Indian" movies where Native Americans were depicted as the savage enemy. It was inaccurate back then and it is still inaccurate now. The term American Indian is something that is used all too often by all Americans. Prior to marrying a Native American, I often used that term as well. Since then, I have realized just how ignorant I, and many others are when it comes to understanding the original inhabitants of these lands. Unfortunately, had I not married an Native American, I am certain that I would still be suffering from the same ignorance and your Census would have re-enforced my ignorance. I believe that by using the term American Indian on such a widely distributed document you have done the Native American community a great disservice and, sadly, have revealed the lack of respect that the majority of Americans have towards the individuals who are truly the first Americans.
I have seen Native American on many other forms in which Nationality is a question. I don't see why it was not used on the Census. If you were worried about confusing people with "Native American" or Aboriginal or First Nation, you would only be confusing those who that answer did not apply. Anyone who identifies themselves as Native American, Aboriginal, or First Nation would not be confused by the terminology. I hope that future documents will label Native Americans appropriately. I just hope that the real American Indians (from India) did not get confused by your terminology and have now skewed the results for Native Americans.
Posted by: Forest | November 23, 2012 2:13 PM
People... no, not just people, the whole world doesn't really take into account how important the census is.
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Posted by: Glory Trenh | November 29, 2012 8:21 PM
I like this website very much, Its a real nice position to read and find information. "The world began without man, and it will complete itself without him." by Claude Levi-Strauss.
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Resources like the one you mentioned here will be really useful to me! I will publish a link to this page on my blog. I'm positive my visitors will locate that very useful.
Posted by: accessories craft | December 10, 2012 8:20 PM
If I forget to turn the sound off on my phone I have the same problem. Loud music comes on in the middle of class and I have to awkwardly rush to turn it off.
Posted by: Jeanne | December 11, 2012 2:59 PM
The census doesn't seem to be correct, in my opinion. Like others have said, they can lie. I didn't even get a census card in the mail? I am not sure what the fix would be though. I guess they could just pull the data from drivers license?
Posted by: Chandler | December 11, 2012 3:49 PM
Wow, Wonder Full collection and also high class user friendly trail room.We think so this is the No:1 site for choosing fonts.Great Collections.
Harikrishnan
Posted by: Jaimie | December 11, 2012 3:50 PM
Lois,
Individuals who received the so-called "long form" during Census 2000 would recognize the American Community Survey (ACS). The ACS is simply a new way of collecting the same detailed socioeconomic and housing characteristics data that have been part of the census for decades and, in some cases even, centuries. Unlike the old long form, the ACS is an ongoing survey; data are collected throughout the year and throughout the decade.
About 19 million households received the long form in 2000; about 3 million receive the ACS annually. Collecting the data throughout the decade allows for the release of updated statistics annually. Without the ACS, policymakers and others who require data for informed decisionmaking would have to rely on data that is years out of date. As part of the official census, the ACS is mandatory even if you are one of the relatively few households that receives the ACS in 2010.
Posted by: Delmar | December 11, 2012 5:09 PM
I've no doubt if he definitely applies himself; he can have a very very long a fruitful career in both the Food stuff services or Janitorial fields....
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