Liberty Unyielding may die, so archive any blog posts you want preserved

Liberty Unyielding may die, so archive any blog posts you want preserved

This blog may die soon, so if you blogged here, you should archive your blog posts at a free web site that lets you archive articles, such as archive.ph. Liberty Unyielding freely permits reproduction of its blog posts at archival web sites of all kinds.

If this blog dies, I will submit some future blog posts instead to other blogs that currently reproduce some of my blog posts, such as Bacon’s Rebellion and The Bull Elephant.

Almost all of my blog posts at this blog are already archived at either archive.ph or CEI.org.

About 2,500 Liberty Unyielding blog posts (mostly mine) are present at archive.today at this link: https://archive.ph/libertyunyielding.com

But another 20,000 Liberty Unyielding blog posts have not been archived there, and could disappear from the web.

Thousands of my blog posts appear at CEI.org, the ones from 2017 and earlier. Post-2017 blog posts by me are almost all present in search results at archive.today that you can find at this link.

If this blog disappears and reappears at a different place, you can find out where it is by emailing me at hfb138@yahoo.com.

Here are examples of where you find recent Liberty Unyielding blog posts, with the title containing a hyperlink to the place where the blog post is archived at an archival web site:

A Minnesota law unconstitutionally limits foster care removals of black kids, but not white kids, archived at https://archive.ph/AOioC

Deregulation saves infant, by permitting gene therapy, archived at https://archive.ph/0wmIW

Chicago mayor attacks ‘incarceration’ as ‘racist’ and ‘immoral’ as Chicago arrests only 13% of violent criminals, archived at https://archive.ph/GPdBZ

Illinois has unusually high student absenteeism rate, archived at https://archive.ph/dmtuX

Some Liberty Unyielding blog posts can be found at the Wayback Machine. But not most of them.

Hans Bader

Hans Bader

Hans Bader practices law in Washington, D.C. After studying economics and history at the University of Virginia and law at Harvard, he practiced civil-rights, international-trade, and constitutional law. He also once worked in the Education Department. Hans writes for CNSNews.com and has appeared on C-SPAN’s “Washington Journal.” Contact him at hfb138@yahoo.com

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