Maybe try reading the whole article, instead of picking a sentence out of context?
Just a bit further in the article - "Starting in 1970, questions about citizenship were included in the long-form questionnaire but not the short form. For instance, in 2000, those who received
the long form were asked, "Is this person a CITIZEN of the United States?"
What I said was -
The statement is clear, concise and factual.
What you choose to read into it is, well frankly, an indication of your lack of objectivity.
I never said every man, woman, and child living in the US answered the question before or were aware of it.
The question was posed to 1 out of 6 households (not people, but households) in every Census since 1970 and all ACS's since 1996.
So while that is not a majority of Census respondents in any 1 year and is all of the respondents to ACS since 1996, it has most certainly been brought to the informed public's attention and politician's attention, having been asked for that long.
These are the same people who are now raising such an uproar.
It is a legitimate question that has never been an issue until this administration and is now political fodder.