Is Google bias in prioritizing Adsense over search engine content relativity?

UPDATE 2010-03-09: As of the time this article was written, not one Google Search query referral has been made to this article. Several Google spiders have indexed the page, but is Google filtering out negatives about themselves, and from their own search engine? 

Google knows who buys the ads. Google knows who clicks the ads. Google then can shape and filter search engine results based on your demographics and what other things you search for, therefore optimizing Google's Adsense Campaign. 

On to old business ...


It has been a personal challenge to write about content, and have it get SEO recognition; SEO meaning Search Engine Optimized. I began JordanPeterson.me back in March of 2009 as an attempt to thread all of my interests into one place, whether it be blogs, reviews, or fixes to software bugs. The graph of monthly hits digs out some awesome growth over a short period of time. However, when I posted an article about my experiences in overly high auto insurance quotes and how a particular company competed with my previous policy holder, jordanpeterson.me took a plunder in hits shortly following and continued thereafter.

I did a little research and found that any word variation of "auto insurance", "cheap car insurance", and so forth, are high ticket adsense payouts per click and that any bogus blogs written about the topic in an attempt to obtain a high dollar ad would taint SEO status.

I however, find it frustrating that my experience and writings about a topic that incidentally relate to a high dollar adsense keyword campaign should remove site SEO credibility and lower the priority in which content may be relevant. If I have real time content and or a blog to write about, Google's adsense network should not demote SEO credibility nor be bias in picking who's content is fitting for the parallels of Google's Adsense and Search.

It is a known fact, and I will find where I read it, that Google's Adsense campaign is Google's bread and butter. No other Google invention has come close to the profit potential that their Adsense network has obtained; it is what put Google on the map.

In my opinion, the above signs tell me, that our good friend Google can be bought out.