A lot of people post about the importance of archiving. Here's a personal example of why.
I had bad covid symptoms April 2020, when news and resources were scarce, before hearing about ivermectin and with HCQ availability still in flux. I recovered using nebulized hydrogen peroxide. Whatever you think about the various therapies, at the time I wanted to share my experience to help other people.
Naturally, people want to do their own research before infusing a home-made chemical mixture into their lungs, so I shared with them the same websites, blogs and videos that I used before doing it myself. I had sites for 3 licensed doctors, at least a dozen video testimonials and demonstrations from a variety of users, and a press article or two. Today, they are ALL GONE--- WIPED OFF THE WEB.
One by one, each doctor's site was hit with a cease & desist letter and got shut down. YT made the vids hard to find (maybe still there somewhere) or deleted them. My recommendations had their authority downgraded to "trust me, bro" after having previously been in the "easily-corroborated by multiple expert and authoritative independent sources" category. Using health info to redpill my MSM-drinking family and friends that much harder.
I only referenced these sites and videos every few weeks, so it took a while for me to realize. I had no idea how to archive (thanks techfags for clearing that up with helpful posts) and in fact didn't even know archiving without downloading was a thing. I also thought it was tech reserved for 007 stuff like Cheney's 9/11 schedule, not necessary for home remedies. But if there is any site you reference and send to other people with any frequency, my experience shows you should archive it. Here is a helpful guide from u/pepesee https://greatawakening.win/p/12jJLK6127/how-to-archive-sites-for-posting/
(And peroxide therapy? I found another source, eventually. Here is the archived link: https://archive.md/SvEEm. Worked wonders for me, but I'd still use ivermectin first.)
The moral? If it's worth remembering, it's worth archiving.
Thank you for posting this!