From the gun email list at work:
From: Shawn
Sent: Friday, October 24, 2014 8:37 AM
Subject: Weapons on Campus survey….quick and confidentialMy son Kyle is a Senior Cadet (MS-4) in the US Army ROTC at the University of Arizona. He is enrolled in a political science course focused on polling, and has been tasked with creating a survey on a topic of his choice, collecting and analyzing the responses, and writing a report of his findings. His topic is weapons on campus. He has asked his mother and I to help him collect responses by asking as many people as we can to participate in his survey. The survey is very short and completely confidential. If you read through the survey and prefer not to answer the questions, you are not required to submit. You can simply close the tab or browser.
Thanks for your time.
Shawn
Link to survey: https://kyle14.typeform.com/to/CQpZsc
I dislike the wording of question 14. People are not given such a right. But I answered it as “strongly agree” anyway.
Did you write them back and explain the problem with q14?
No. But see his response below.
We could debate when carry is taxed with application fees and requires expressed permission from the government that it is ”given”. Not that that is right or appropriate, or even legal.
Thank you for helping with my research. It has improved my response numbers significantly so I appreciate it. With regard to the wording of question 14, I apologize for the confusion that may have developed from that. I will address the concern when I write my report in a couple of months. Being a resident of California, I didn’t take into account different regions and that is my fault. Once again, thank you for all of your help. It is greatly appreciated.
You are welcome.
Will we be able to see the results after the survey has finished?
I understand how living in such an oppressive environment affects your viewpoint.
I will be sure to send my Dad the results when I finish my write up.
Thanks.
Who is ben? It says that Kyle has him tasked with creating the survey. Shouldn’t we hear from ben? Let him come forth and declare himself.
(OK, that’s my way of saying there was an “e” left out)
I just copy and pasted, typo and all, the original email.
I just fixed it.
I would have asked if the respondent is a college student.