Using the Internet Archive to Document Collaboration with Trans Extremism
A useful tool also when some platform deletes you or some collaborator has erased from the Internet embarrassing material.
UPDATE: At the end of this article I have a url of an article at Attitude magazine which they pulled offline quickly.
Using Archive.org to save webpages that might be deleted. The Wayback Machine at the Internet Archive is a very useful tool.
Sometimes opponents post web pages that later they might want to delete because they come to realize that it was detrimental to their cause, or because the political or cultural situation changes and they realize that it incriminates them.
I often save such pages at the Internet Archive. For example. I saved a webpage from the Advocate web page badgering Gay men to have sex with a transman. I am sure that in the future they will regret every having it online, but now having it in the Internet Archive the webpage will be available as long as the Internet Archive exists.
The other application is to have your webpage saved at the Internet archive. If you get deleted, you will have your website archived and still available. You will be able to save the Internet Archive URL. It is permanent.
Another application is that sometimes an adversary has cleaned up their act, but up until a certain period of time they were saying this and that. You can track back on the Internet Archive and see what their webpage said any year going all the way back until they started.
One of the things we will need to do is make sure those who enabled trans extremism won’t be able to deny their actions. Using the Internet Archive will be critical to do this.
UPDATE:
If you read it you can see why they pulled it. It was really offensive and Attitude magazine realized that they had let the reality of trans homophobia out of the bag.
This is how I tracked it down.