A conspiracy newsletter, printed on actual paper and mailed say once a month.
Obviously the internet makes the news a lot faster moving but with so much censorship its problematic.
And the newsletter could have deeper articles, the type of stuff that gets buried or scrubbed from search engines, like about the Payseurs or other esoteric topics that are impossible to google properly.
Could ask for a small donation to cover postage and supplies. A PO box and youre in business.
Just a thought, feel free to shoot me down with why it wouldn't work.
Sort of like Bill Coopers CAJI for the modern era
Bulletin board systems were way before we had internet.
BTW, you can buy a tiny modem that's inside a USB dongle.
Computer Shopper used to have thousands of BBS listings. I would be up late at night trying a lot of them. Does anyone here remember Rusty n Edie? They were bigtime, and I think they had over a hundred incoming phone lines and thousands of files (girls and bootleg software mostly).
The only mode of electronic communication I used before Internet was Ham Radio. So I guess I missed all the Rusty n Edie fun :)
Maybe we should go back to building home-brew BBB. Perhaps when we have the possible Internet blackout, who knows, phone lines might still be up!
Research online. There are tutorials and free BBS software online. There are still some boards available, and there are lists online. Some of them are also available through the internet while it still works.
I didn't get into ham radio, except listening in on a classic Radio Shack communications receiver. There are still scheduled nets on shortwave.