Staying Safe Online

A ‘Self-Doxing’ Rave Helps Trans People Stay Safe Online

Janus Rose ยทApr 8, 2026 at 10:18 AM

At a New York party, attendees spent Trans Day of Visibility dancing, DJing, and learning how to become less visible online.

Imani Thompson, digital security trainer and organizer of the event / Photo by Janus Rose

Itโ€™s Trans Day of Visibility, and Iโ€™m at an event space in the heart of New York Cityโ€™s Commie Corridor to learn how to become less visible online.

The crowd gathered at the aptly-named Trans Pecos in Ridgewood, Queens is here for โ€œ404: Deadname Not Found,โ€ a digital self-defense workshop which promises to teach trans people how to find and remove their sensitive personal information from the internet (and which also has no relation to this website). The vibe is giving OpSec rave happy hourโ€”attendees sip colorful drinks, groove to DJ sets, and huddle around laptops using online tools to track down their own digital footprints.

The goal of the exercise is to find holes in your digital defenses, a practice cybersecurity folks call โ€œred-teaming.โ€ A slide deck guides participants through this โ€œself-doxingโ€ ritual, instructing them to use websites like IntelBase, PimEyes, and haveibeenpwned to find addresses, selfies, passwords, old names and aliases, and other personal info that might have been left sitting around on the open internet.

It makes for great cocktail party banter. One participant raises their arms in triumph upon receiving a clean bill of health while checking if their information was leaked in a data breach. Others swivel laptop screens and compare notes on the various places their digital detritus had cropped up. In my case, I was lucky: I mostly found data brokers with incorrect information, a long-forgotten MySpace page, and a woman whose spam calls Iโ€™ve been receiving for the past 10 years. Finally, participants are directed to various pages where they can request data to be removed, or sign up for discounted services like Kanary and DeleteMe that do the removals on your behalf.

Behind the fun and light atmosphere, everyone here knows the unspoken reality that drives tonightโ€™s activities: an unrelenting wave of discriminatory bills and executive orders that are rapidly demolishing trans rights across the US. โ€œTrans Visibilityโ€ is a nice idea, but it turns out it really sucks to be visible in a fascist surveillance state where the highest levels of government are obsessively trying to destroy your ability to live.

โ€œIn this world of hyper-surveillance, I want to make sure all my stuff is safe and that no one is trying to harvest my data for anything,โ€ Anna, a workshop participant, told 404 Media. Anna asked to use a pseudonym to protect her identity, which is not surprising given that the goal of the workshop is to make it harder to be doxed. โ€œEspecially now that thereโ€™s lots of incentives for the federal government to get into that business, I just wanna make sure all of that is under wraps.โ€

Like the eventโ€™s name suggests, many attendees are looking for traces of their โ€œdeadnames,โ€ which is how some trans folks refer to the names they were given pre-transition. Trans people face a disproportionately high risk of being doxed online, and deadnames and other sensitive info are frequently dug up on right-wing hate forums like KiwiFarms and social media sites like Elon Muskโ€™s X, where harassment campaigns and hate speech are allowed and even encouraged.

โ€œWe have to protect ourselves,โ€ said Ryan, who also used a pseudonym. โ€œItโ€™s great to know how to find stuff like this, because you never know whatโ€™s still out there.โ€

Imani Thompson, a digital security trainer who organized the event as part of her series Cache Me Outside, says she started hosting the free workshops at queer bars in Brooklyn a year ago, after noticing trans and intersex friends who were noticeably shaken by the opening salvos of the second Trump administration.

โ€œI hadn’t seen cybersecurity events that looked like they would attract or resonate with the crowds I felt needed this information the most,โ€ she told 404 Media. โ€œI wanted to make this fun and un-intimidating and doing digital security training at the bar is kind of silly and fun and gives us a built-in VPN and protection from sensitive convos being recorded.โ€

There are specific reasons many trans people are anxious about their personal data and online presence these days. For one, trans identities often donโ€™t fit neatly into government boxes, and the name and gender they are assigned at birth may or may not match their government-issued IDs. Recently, a new law in Kansas resulted in hundreds of trans people being told that their drivers licenses and IDs had been invalidated overnight, forcing them to obtain new documents that revert to the sex marker assigned at birth. Journalist Marissa Kabas later reported that the 300 trans IDs in question had been flagged and not immediately invalidated, but the goal of the law and its ensuing chaos was clear: requiring trans people to have IDs that donโ€™t match their appearance or lived reality, forcing them to out themselves and introducing friction and discrimination into their everyday lives.

The same Kansas law also implemented the first state-level โ€œbathroom bounty,โ€ making it a crime for trans people to use appropriate bathrooms and changing rooms and promising rewards to random passersby who feel โ€œaggrievedโ€ by someone they think might be trans. Lawmakers in Idaho have passed an even harsher bill, which would charge repeat trans bathroom-users with a felony and up to 5 years of jail time. These bills threaten not only trans people, but anyone whose appearance might fall outside of someoneโ€™s normative expectations of โ€œmaleโ€ and โ€œfemale.โ€ And they are especially dangerous at a time when facial recognition can near-instantly identify someone with a quick search.

Thompson also worries about the information that queer folks can reveal while asking for help online. Trans people experience unemployment, housing insecurity, and violence at exponentially higher rates than cis people, and itโ€™s not uncommon to see Gofundme pages and Venmo accounts flooding social media feeds. These posts will sometimes include personal details like a personโ€™s name, face, transition status, location, immigration status, and even how much they have in their bank accountโ€”great for getting donations, but not so great for the doxable breadcrumbs they leave behind.

โ€œI think the risk is tenfold for the dolls and Black trans siblings because of disproportionate scrutiny in light of these bathroom bills and also how we do mutual aid,โ€ said Thompson. โ€œWhenever I see a mutual aid request being reposted or processed it makes me nervous, because we’re basically doxing our most vulnerable friends.โ€ To reduce risk, she recommends people take down mutual aid posts as soon as needs are met and set their Venmo activity to private. โ€œI feel like the intention in listing off how all these systems of oppression impact our friends are meant to create a sense of urgency and care, but then months later it’s still floating around and is a goldmine for someone who wants to claim they were made to feel unsafe in a bathroom so they can claim $3k or further an agenda.โ€

The privacy attitudes on display at the event contrast with the dominant media narratives about trans communities a decade ago. Fresh off the Supreme Court victory in Obergefell vs. Hodges that legalized same-sex marriage, many at that time were convinced that trans visibility would pave the way to equality, as glossy magazine covers featuring stars like Laverne Cox declared a โ€œTrans Tipping Point.โ€ But while conditions for some trans people marginally improved, we all know what happened next: a wave of reactionary anti-trans state laws, culminating in the re-election of Donald Trump and a series of executive orders aimed at destroying trans peoplesโ€™ access to healthcare, sports, bathroomsโ€”essentially the ability to live a normal life.

At the same time, protection canโ€™t be a retreat back into the closet. โ€œItโ€™s still important for trans voices to be heard in online spaces,โ€ said Anna. โ€œItโ€™s not like I wanna go into the shadows or anything. I just donโ€™t want people to know my personal data, my personal records, any of that.โ€

โ€œBeing Black, I also understand the distinction between visibility and hypervisibility and the precarity and lack of agency that hypervisibility creates,โ€ said Thompson. โ€œIt’s tricky to find language around digital security that doesn’t imply queerness is something to hide or a shameful thing, because of course it’s not. I think having agency and purpose in how we can show up online and interact with tech as well as literacy around how technology and surveillance operates makes us better equipped.โ€

Janus Rose is New York City-based journalist, educator and artist whose work explores the impacts of A.I. and technology on activists and marginalized communities. Previously a senior editor atย VICE, she has been published in digital and print outlets includingย e-Flux Journal,ย DAZED Magazine,ย The New Yorker, andย Al Jazeera.

A Few Short Vids: Some Politics/War, Some Not, & A Marriage Proposal!






Well, Here Is This:

Why Democrats are suddenly winning back the left โ€” and the “double-haters”

Plus, the share of Americans calling themselves Republicans just hit a decade low. Your weekly political data roundup for April 5, 2026.

G. Elliott Morris

Leading off: Very liberal Americans, who have rated the Democratic Party poorly relative to other partisans since 2024, have swung sharply back toward congressional Democrats over the last few months. A new poll also finds voters who dislike both parties now prefer Democrats by 31 points. These gains should reassure a party that has faced internal strife since Trumpโ€™s second term began, but look less due to renewed faith in the Democrats and more like anti-Trump consolidation. That might not matter for the midterms โ€” a vote won is a vote won โ€” but it will matter for 2028 and beyond.

On deck this week: Tuesdayโ€™s Deep Dive will cover some new research on the level of ideological thinking in the electorate and the value (or not) of ideological moderation by the Democrats, and Fridayโ€™s Chart of the Week will respond to whateverโ€™s in the news. Iโ€™m also finalizing questions for our April Strength In Numbers/Verasight poll this week โ€” so subscribers, send in your question recommendations if you havenโ€™t already! (Email or comments are fine.)

On with the data.

1. Anti-Trump sentiment, not pro-Democratic enthusiasm, is uniting Democrats again

A new YouGov/The Economist poll, fielded from March 27 – 30, finds that Democratic voters have grown significantly warmer toward their members of Congress over the last few months. Earlier in 2026, Democrats said their partyโ€™s MOCs were favorable at a rate just 30 points higher than the rate they said their party was unfavorable. That gap has now grown to +55 โ€” rivaling the favorability of Republican MOCs among Republican voters.

Aggregate Democratic views have increased because very liberal Americans have become sharply more favorable toward congressional Democrats since January. This group evaluated the partyโ€™s members of Congress favorably by a net +28 points margin โ€” up from a -13 deficit in January. Thatโ€™s a 41-point shift in two months:

Among Americans who are liberal but not very liberal, moderate, or conservative (basically everyone else), views of congressional Democrats barely budged.

Overall, U.S. adults give the Democrats a favorability rating of -21, 5 points higher than the rating they currently give Republicans.

That is a meaningful change. Last summerStrength In Numbers documented that Democratic party favorability was unusually weak even as the party remained competitive on the generic ballot. We dug into the survey microdata and found out that this was because many left-leaning Americans were frustrated with their own side after the 2024 loss. Charles Franklin, who conducts the Marquette University Law School Poll, has been tracking the same dynamic in both national and Wisconsin polling. Among Democratic identifiers in Wisconsin, his data shows a net +56 favorability rating for their party, compared to +74 among Republican identifiers for the GOP.

Franklin finds that while Democrats still disagree about what theyโ€™re for, they are virtually unanimous in what theyโ€™re against: Donald Trump.

The simplest explanation for Democratsโ€™ gains is that politically active party members on the left โ€” who have had a lot of complaints about how the party is handling Trump 2.0 โ€” are now responding to the same thing many other Americans are right now. That is, the president has moved public policy on many issue domains far to the right and up on the authoritarian axis (certainly far past the policy temperature โ€œset point,โ€ to use the language of the thermostatic model), and progressives are setting their differences with the Democrats aside for the moment as they focus on defeating an increasingly unpopular Republican president. This looks more like anti-Trump unity than pro-Democratic enthusiasm.

But itโ€™s not just the base

The Democratsโ€™ consolidation of left-wing liberalism is one piece of a broader backlash to Trumpism that shows up in the polling data right now. Another notable finding this week is from a new CNN/SSRS survey that found that about one-quarter of the public holds an unfavorable view of both parties. These are the so-called โ€œdouble haters.โ€ This group prefers Democrats on the 2025 generic ballot by 31 points.

This is a big deal for two reasons. First, thatโ€™s a massive shift; Double haters broke for Trump in 2016 and again in 2024. Now theyโ€™re swinging hard the other way.

Like Franklinโ€™s polling, the CNN report also finds that Democratsโ€™ gains are driven largely by opposition to the GOP, not enthusiasm for Democrats themselves. When asked what they dislike about Democrats, 22% of double haters called the party โ€œdo-nothingโ€ and 11% said they arenโ€™t standing up enough to Trump and the GOP, while 10% said theyโ€™re too liberal.

Will 2026 be a Democratic fake out?

So weโ€™ve got two layers of anti-Trump consolidation happening at once. YouGovโ€™s data shows the Democratic left is coming home, and the CNN poll shows voters who dislike both parties โ€” a swing group that has been decisive in recent elections โ€” are breaking heavily toward Democrats for the first time in years. Neither group is necessarily enthusiastic about Democrats. But both are currently heavily voting against Republicans. According to the CNN poll, 79% of voters who plan to support Democrats say their vote is a message of opposition to Trump. (Only 46% of Republican voters say theyโ€™ll vote to show support for the president.)

This could make for a big electoral win for Democrats in November, despite the division in the party and its overall nominally unpopular rating. According to CNN, Democratic-aligned voters are 17 points more likely than Republicans to call themselves โ€œextremely motivatedโ€ to vote in 2026 โ€” even though theyโ€™re 14 points less likely to view their own party favorably. Meanwhile, the Democrats have opened up a large lead in the U.S. House generic congressional ballot for 2026. They are up +6 in both the CNN and YouGov surveys, and closer to +5 on average.

This is the pattern Iโ€™d expect in a midterm environment that favors the out-party. But with many Americans (including the vaunted โ€œdouble-hatersโ€) still viewing the Democrats as weak and ineffectual, a big electoral victory will not completely solve their deeper problems of identity and division.

The trend in this data is good for the Democrats, in other words โ€” but donโ€™t misread a positive trend for a positive level.

2. What Strength In Numbers published last week

Readers of Strength In Numbers got three articles last week โ€” a lighter load, since I was out sick Monday and Tuesday.

This weekโ€™s Deep Dive asked a question Iโ€™ve been getting a lot lately: if Trump is 20+ points underwater, why arenโ€™t Democrats leading the generic ballot by 20?

Trump is 20+ points underwater. So why aren't Democrats up 20 for the midterms?

Trump is 20+ points underwater. So why aren’t Democrats up 20 for the midterms?

G. Elliott Morris Apr 1

Read full story

On Thursday, David and I recorded our weekly podcast about Trumpโ€™s record-low polling numbers on Iran and the economy:

(snip-a bit More, go see it)

REUTERS: Iran says peace talks would be โ€œunreasonableโ€ following Israeli strikes in Lebanon

Iran says peace talks would be โ€œunreasonableโ€ following Israeli strikes in Lebanon
Israel pounded Lebanon with its heaviest strikes yet on Wednesday, killing hundreds of people and drawing a threat of retaliation from Iran, which suggested it would be “unreasonable” to โ€Œproceed with talks to forge a permanent peace deal with the United States.

Read in Reuters: https://apple.news/AKa4EM5RHQZSnWQmITMMeQQ

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Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie

Olympic Athletes Rapinoe and Bird Slam IOC Trans Ban: โ€œIโ€™m Sickened By Itโ€

https://www.erininthemorning.com/p/olympic-athletes-rapinoe-and-bird

โ€œIt’s just a total acquiescence to the Trump Administration,โ€ Rapinoe said.

Well, It’s True.

Funny, some, but true. I enjoy reading at McSweeney’s, and I don’t do it often enough.

Final Exam for the Class โ€œWhat a Presidential Candidate Can and Cannot Survive, Apparentlyโ€ Taught
by Howard Dean

by Tom Ellison and Nick Morgan

ย ย ย ย ย ย Final Exam
Poli Sci 401
Yale University,
Jackson School of Global Affairs
Professor Howard Dean

Part I (50 points) โ€“ multiple choice

1. Which of these public utterances would immediately end a candidateโ€™s presidential ambitions?

A. โ€œI want to be a dictator.โ€

B. โ€œIf [she] werenโ€™t my daughter, perhaps Iโ€™d be dating her.โ€

C. โ€œYEEEAAAAAWW!!!โ€

2. Each of the following moves would consolidate a candidateโ€™s base, except:

A. Expressing agreement with the great replacement theory

B. Expressing solidarity with the Proud Boys and January 6 insurrectionists

C. Expressing enthusiasm, which was a big no-no in 2004 Iowa, apparently

3. Which violation of American values would cause the electorate to doubt the candidateโ€™s fitness for the presidency?

A. Violating the human rights of families by tearing children away from their parents at the border

B. Violating the bodies of twenty-six women

C. Violating the unspoken decibel limit on cheering at an event meant for cheering, which is definitely a good rule that applies equally to everyone

4. If exposed to the public, which revelations would instantly decimate campaign fundraising?

A. The candidate being caught with boxes full of state secrets next to their toilet

B. The candidate being caught sleeping with a porn star just after his wife had a baby

C. The candidate being caught up in a moment, just a fleeting moment, which at the time seemed normal, not the end of everything the candidate had ever worked for since the candidate was twelve

5. Which of the following statements warrants being aired 633 times by national news outlets in a span of four days?

A. โ€œTheyโ€™re poisoning the blood of our country.โ€

B. โ€œLaziness is a trait in Blacks.โ€

C. โ€œYEEEAAAAAWW!!!โ€

6. Which of the following audio recordings would be so damaging that it becomes a years-long political meme and defines the candidate for the rest of their life?

A. A recording where the candidate extorts Ukraine for election assistance

B. A recording where the candidate brags about grabbing women โ€œby the pussyโ€

C. A recording where the mics picked up the candidate but not the roar of the crowd, which, if you were there, was really loud and made screaming much more normal in context, actually

7. Which action would cause an immediate, double-digit drop in the polls?

A. Starting a movement to hang the vice president

B. Starting a coup dโ€™etat attempt against the United States of America

C. Starting to say โ€œyee-hawโ€ because it felt so right after rattling off the upcoming state primaries, but then realizing halfway through the first syllable that, dammit Howard, someone from Vermont canโ€™t pull off โ€œyee-haw,โ€ and then panicking and switching to โ€œyeah!โ€ or โ€œyay!โ€ all at once, but it was too late and a lump in your throat made it come out like the death knell of a tortured bobcat

8. True or False: It makes perfect sense that the twenty-five-year abortion record of the presidential candidate who ended Roe v. Wade has less Wikipedia content than the three-second audio record of a candidate who just, you know, was pumped up in the face of a setback in the Iowa caucuses, so pumped that he lost control of his body in a burst of unvarnished optimism:

A. True

B. False

C. There has not been a difference between truth and falsehood, right and wrong, or sanity and insanity since early 2004

9. Which charges would provoke widespread calls to suspend a campaign?

A. Being charged in New York with thirty-four felony counts for covering up sex with a porn star

B. Being charged in Florida with forty felony counts for stealing state secrets and lying to the FBI

C. Being charged in Georgia with ten felony counts for conspiring to steal an election

D. Being charged in DC with four felony counts for trying to stop the electoral vote certification in Congress in order to seize power from the lawful president-elect, Joe Biden, in violation of the US Constitution and the peaceful transfer of power

E. Being charged with all eighty-eight felony counts above, all in a five-month period

F. Being charged with a zeal to oppose the invasion of Iraq and establish universal health care, which looks pretty good these days if you ask some people but was apparently too sincere for the petty, vindictive shitheads who actually vote in this country.

10. Which of the following statements would make voters question a presidential candidateโ€™s mental capacity?

A. โ€œHAPPY EASTER TO ALL, INCLUDING CROOKED AND CORRUPT PROSECUTORS AND JUDGES THAT ARE DOING EVERYTHING POSSIBLE TO INTERFERE WITH THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 2024, AND PUT ME IN PRISON, INCLUDING THOSE MANY PEOPLE THAT I COMPLETELY & TOTALLY DESPISE BECAUSE THEY WANT TO DESTROY AMERICA, A NOW FAILING NATION, LIKE โ€˜DERANGEDโ€™ JACK SMITH, WHO IS EVIL AND โ€˜SICK,โ€™ MRS. FANI โ€˜FAUNIโ€™ WADE, WHO SAID SHE HARDLY KNEW THE โ€˜SPECIALโ€™ PROSECUTOR, ONLY TO FIND THAT HE SPENT YEARS โ€˜LOVINGโ€™ HER, LONG BEFORE THE GEORGIA PERSECUTION OF PRESIDENT TRUMP BEGAN (AND THEREBY MAKING THE CASE AGAINST ME NULL, VOID, AND ILLEGAL!), AND LAZY ON VIOLENT CRIME ALVIN BRAGG WHO, WITH CROOKED JOEโ€™S DOJ THUGS, UNFAIRLY WORKING IN THE D.A.โ€™s OFFICE, ILLEGALLY INDICTED ME ON A CASE HE NEVER WANTED TO BRING AND VIRTUALLY ALL LEGAL SCHOLARS SAY IS A CASE THAT SHOULD NOT BE BROUGHT, IS BREAKING THE LAW IN DOING SO (POMERANTZ!), WAS TURNED DOWN BY ALL OTHER LAW ENFORCEMENT AUTHORITIES, AND IS NOT A CRIME. HAPPY EASTER EVERYONE!โ€

B. โ€œYEEEAAAAAWW!!!โ€

Part 2 โ€“ Essay (50,000 pts)

Write a twenty-five-page essay on the following question:

Does anything even matter?

(snip)

Science And Wonder And Beauty

Whale filmed giving birth, with a little help from her friends

Paris (France) (AFP) โ€“ Scientists have managed to film a spectacular event rarely witnessed by humans: a sperm whale giving birth while other females worked together to support the mother and her newborn.

A team from Project CETI, an international effort seeking to understand how whales communicate, were in a boat near a pod of 11 whales off the coast of the Caribbean island of Dominica on July 8, 2023.

A 19-year-old female named Rounder was surrounded by family members and others as she was about to give birth to her second calf.

Over nearly five and a half hours, the scientists documented the group’s behaviour, watching them from the boat, filming them with drones and recording the sounds underneath the waves.

The data they collected, which was published in the journals Scientific Reports and Science on Thursday, represent an exceptional rarity in the history of science.

Out of 93 species of cetaceans — a group that includes whales, dolphins and porpoises — only nine have ever been observed giving birth in the wild.

Rarer still was that whales not related to the mother were helping out.

“This is the first evidence of birth assistance in non-primates,” Project CETI team member Shane Gero told the New Scientist.

“It is fascinating to see the intergenerational support from the grandmother to her labouring daughter, and the support from the other, unrelated females.”

Lifting up the newborn

The birth lasted 34 minutes, from their tails emerging from the water to the calf being born.

During labour, other adult females dove under Rounder’s dorsal fin, often on their backs with the heads facing her genital slit.

Immediately after the birth, the pod’s behaviour “rapidly changed” as every member became active, according to the study in Scientific Reports.

All the adults were “squeezing the newborn’s body between theirs, touching it with their heads”, the researchers wrote.

The whales pointed their noses towards the newborn, “pushing it around, under the water, and onto and across their bodies above the surface”.

The remarkable behaviour dates back more than 36 million years and is believed to be due to the unique history of cetaceans.

After their distant ancestors left the water and adapted to life on land, cetaceans are the only mammals that returned to the ocean.

This dive back into the water required some evolutionary tricks to prevent newborns from drowning.

For example, whale calves are born tail-first, rather than head-first like other mammals.

However, while newborn sperm whales become talented swimmers within a few hours, they still sink right after birth.

So other whales have to lift the calf up “to prevent the newborn from sinking while also facilitating its first breaths”, the researchers suggested.

Primates — including humans — are the only other mammals known to help assist each other out during birth.

Excited vocal sounds

The scientists also recorded the whales making many sounds, including significant changes in “vocal style” during key events, the study said.

This included when a group of pilot whales approached the pod after the birth.

The changes in vocalisation suggest that the group was coordinating to support the birth — or protect the newborn, the researchers said.

Sperm whales have one of the longest pregnancies in the animal kingdom, with a gestation period that lasts up to 16 months.

When calves are born they are already four metres (13 feet) long. They will rely on their mother’s milk for at least two years.

As they grow, the young become the centre of their pod’s social unit, with others helping out with babysitting while the mother searches for food.

After the birth was filmed in 2023, the pod was not spotted again for over a year. Then the newborn was spotted with Accra and Aurora — the other young members of the pod — on July 25 last year.

Surviving its first year is a good sign that the sperm whale will reach adulthood, the Project CETI team said.

ยฉ 2026 AFP

THE GUARDIAN: โ€˜Masquerading as a universityโ€™: inside the brazen rightwing plan to conquer American schools

โ€˜Masquerading as a universityโ€™: inside the brazen rightwing plan to conquer American schools
As teachers eagerly adopt its free lesson plans and the White House boosts its videos, PragerU is intent on one goal: attracting young people to conservatism

Read in The Guardian: https://apple.news/Aqs0t0DpeR1yPE9sm2q8uDA

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Reblog From MPS:

Scottie and I each post from Pro Publica’s excellent news reportage; especially news that gets the barest mention everywhere else. Their excellent reporters can use a hand now. Please read and sign:

Just In Case A Reader Happens By With Some Idea, Or Knows Where To Share This One: