U.S. Government Searches

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Arguably, the most useful of Google’s specialty search areas is that devoted to the U.S. government. Actually, this distinct search engine is both larger and smaller than the name implies. This engine is global in reach. At the same time, it reaches below federal government sites to the state and municipal level.

You might think that this entire search engine merely replaces the site:.gov operator:keyword combination described in Chapter 2. Not so. In fact, site:.gov remains quite useful in the UncleSam search because the results pages dish up a hearty mix of gov, mil (for military), and com sites that bear some relation to government, public policy, law, defense, and other fields of administration, the judiciary, and the legislature. All domain extensions are represented here.

The best way to get a feel for the blend of results you get in the U.S. government search is to throw in some keywords and let it rip. Don’t think too hard about it — any keywords will do. Try generic, common words that you’d use in a general Web search, such as internet or music or paris vacation. Or, choose newsy words such as bush or terrorism or treaty.

Tip 

Use the results of your search to find Web sites that you can later search with the site operator. You can perform such a search in a general or UncleSam Web search. In fact, some of these discovered sites might make it to your bookmark list for regular visitation. The following are some examples of interesting sites that turn up in UncleSam searches:
speaker.house.gov
freedom.house.gov
democraticleader.house.gov
memory.loc.gov
gop.gov

Many related domains are too numerous and related to list, such as state government sites and the sites of individual House members.

Tip 

Searching on issues and hot phrases can reveal who in the government (individuals, agencies, committees) is involved in that issue. Some examples include:
pledge of allegiance
fcc deregulation
abortion legislation

These searches display sites of agencies and members of congress, in addition to more general information pages.

All the specialty search engines recognize the same search operators you use in a normal Web search (see Chapter 2). I often use the filetype operator to search for PDF files in the U.S. government area, plumbing a rich trove of Congressional hearing transcriptions, court judgments, and other official documents that are customarily posted online in PDF format. Using filetype:pdf transforms any search; try adding it after any keyword string. For example:

music hearings filetype:pdf housing starts filetype:pdf testimony military filetype:pdf consumer confidence filetype:pdf 

The intitle and allintitle operators also work well in UncleSam searches. In fact, combining the power of those operators with the filetype:pdf combination is particularly fruitful because PDF files are usually titled so carefully — far more carefully than Web pages. Get specific with the title words. These examples have worked well to sharply narrow results:

allintitle:bush tax cut filetype:pdf allintitle:social security future filetype:pdf allintitle:iraq reconstruction filetype:pdf

The preceding examples also work nicely — and quite differently — without the filetype:pdf addition.

Tip 

Think about using keywords that are applicable to different fields of inquiry, such as testimony or “congressional hearing” or policy. Putting almost anything after one of those yields fertile results; try music, movies, abortion, taxes, airlines paired with one of them.



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Google for Dummies
Google AdWords For Dummies
ISBN: 0470455772
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2005
Pages: 188

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