John Singleton with Bob HowardRip Van Australia (Stanmore: Cassell Australia, 1977), pp. 35-36, under the heading “Census”.

In the controversy over the 1976 census, most of the argument centred around the issue of privacy. That the government should conduct such a compulsory census was generally accepted, but it was argued that it should not have intruded on people’s privacy by asking certain of the questions. This argument missed the most important point, however. What was it about the questions that made them an invasion of privacy? There are two answers to this question: (1) the nature of the questions themselves, and (2) the fact that they had to be answered. There was very little mention made of this second point.

If you consider it, however, it is only the compulsory nature of the census that makes the invasion of privacy possible. If it wasn’t compulsory, you wouldn’t have to depend on what questions some nameless bureaucrat decided should be in the form. You could make your own choice. Any question that you found offensive, you could simply ignore. Therefore, we argued at the time that hassles over just what the questions were were of secondary importance — matters of detail only. The primary problem, and the one which should be rectified first, was that the census was compulsory.

In a free society, no government has the right to violate the rights of the citizens. No government has the right to compel its citizens to fill out census forms. This error is compounded when you realize that the main reason the government requires such detailed information is to determine how they are going to plan our lives for us in the future: decentralization programmes, school building, road building, the provision of utilities — none of which should be done by the government anyway.

Taken with all the other things the government is slowly gathering control of, the census is just another bar in the cage being built to hold us. Secret police, media control boards, progressive centralization of power, more sophisticated methods of information storage and cross referencing, relentless increases in economic control and social regulation — and now we’re even required — forced by law — to provide yet more information for the governmental machine.

The maximum penalty for providing no answers on anything ever to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, is twenty dollars. We recommend it to you as money well spent.