More than 8,000 web pages on more than a dozen American government’s websites have been deleted since Friday afternoon, noted an analysis of the New York Times, while federal agencies rush to take into account the orders of the president Trump targeting diversity initiatives and “gender ideology”.
The purges have deleted information on vaccines, veterans care, hatred crimes and scientific research, among other subjects. Doctors, researchers and other professionals often rely on this data and government lawyers. Some government agencies seem to have deleted entire sections of their websites, while others are missing only a handful of pages.
Among the pages that have been removed:
(Links are archived versions.)
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More than 3,000 pages of Centers for Disease Control and PreventionIncluding a thousand research articles filed under the prevention of chronic diseases, MST processing directives, information on Alzheimer’s warning panels, training in overdose prevention and vaccination directives for pregnant people (the use of the expression “pregnant people” could have contributed to its withdrawal).
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More than 3,000 pages of the CensusThe vast majority of which are articles deposited during research and methodology. Other missing pages include policies and data documentation for several data and surveys.
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Over 1,000 pages of Justice Office ProgramsIncluding a functionality on the violence of meetings among adolescents and a blog post on subsidies which have been devoted to the fight against hatred crimes.
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Over 200 pages of Tête-à-têteA program for low-income children, including advice to help families establish routines and videos on prevention of postpartum depression.
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More than 180 pages of the Ministry of JusticeIncluding all data on hate crimes at state level and seven pages discussing anti-LGBTQ hatred crimes.
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Nearly 150 pages from Administration of drug addiction and mental health servicesIncluding more than 50 press advertisements on the use of the national distress assistance line in the event of a disaster following fire or natural disasters.
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More than 100 pages of the Food and Drug AdministrationIncluding more than 60 regulatory guidelines on subjects such as increased diversity in clinical trials and dependence and abuse potential in drug trials.
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Nearly 50 research articles of Scientific and technical information office. The deleted articles extend over several fields, including optics, chemistry and experimental medicine.
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Over 25 pages of the Internal Rent Revenue ServiceIncluding the transcription of a video entitled “Here is how to avoid IRS penalties and interest” and the form The private schools must submit each year to certify that they have not adopted a racially discriminatory behavior.
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Two dozen research notices of the Nuclear regulatory committee – But notifications only from the year 2000. The notices before and after 2000 remain.
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20 web pages of the National Institute of Standards and TechnologyIncluding a page detailing the organization’s zero tolerance harassment policy.
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18 pages of Administration of health and services resourcesIncluding a tool kit to deal with women with opioid outbuildings and a FAQ on the MPOX vaccine.
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18 pages of Office of American patents and brandsIncluding pages on innovation and entrepreneurship of veterans and a program to teach high school students on intellectual property.
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Eight pages of Interior departmentIncluding several initiatives of environmental policy policy (the expression “environmental justice” may have contributed to the abolition of certain pages).
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Three pages of Department of Veterans Combators: On care for LGBTQ veterans, care of minority veterans and equity of the Louisiana health care system.
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Two pages of Marshal ServiceA binding to a revision of the standards of correctional establishments and another linking to the departmental preparation program of the ministry.
Many missing pages have appeared linked to a directive of the Trump administration – with a deadline of 5 p.m. Friday – to end all programs that promote “gender ideology” and to withdraw documents and any other media who could do it.
In many cases, the deleted pages have mentioned words such as “inclusion” or “transgender”. It is not clear why other pages have been deleted; How many pages will be permanently deleted; And how many can be restored with revisions.
And things are still in mass: since Friday, several pages have dropped and have returned online; Others stayed long after 5 p.m. Friday and were only kidnapped recently. Other pages of the government, although still accessible, have already been stripped of words related to diversity, sex and climate change, as reported by the Washington Post and others.
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