The web blog "Guest Worker Fraud", formerly found at http://www.guestworkerfraud.com was taken off the web by its hosting provider on January 26th as a result of a sweeping takedown order issued by the New Jersey District Court. The ruling was prompted by a lawsuit initiated by the Indian company Apex Technology Group, whose company imports temporary guest workers into the United States for the purpose of replacing American workers with cheaper foreign substitutes. The Court Order, issued toward the end of December in 2009, signaled the end of a Free Press in the United States.

Other, perhaps more trivial, yet just as puzzling examples of censorship of websites occurred over the last year when several websites that proclaimed TARP bailout chief Neel Kashkari to be a "NASA Scientist" scrubbed this biographical phrase from mention of him. Neel Kashkari's title as NASA Scientist was initiated by George Bush who did not research Kashkari's biography properly. It is disturbing in that editing former references to TARP personnel from websites may signal an even broader effort to edit Internet information about the banking crisis now that Treasury Sec. Geithner has been caught attempting to hide the facts as they concern him and his role in the bailout.

Systemic censorship of websites first started showing in 2000 when derogatory information about the US Census was yanked from websites. Many of these stories reported harassment from Census takers who reportedly followed and yelled at White Americans who refused to answer the "race" portion of the Census and one story that was later removed from the web reported on a mentally disturbed Census taker who wore a home-made black uniform and claimed to be a soldier in a Census army.