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Tuesday, November 18, 2025

THE FRIENDS OF JEFFREY EPSTEIN: A WITTY INQUIRY INTO ELITE AMNESIA

 

THE FRIENDS OF JEFFREY EPSTEIN: A WITTY INQUIRY INTO ELITE AMNESIA

OR: HOW THE RICH AND POWERFUL SUDDENLY DEVELOPED A SEVERE CASE OF

"I BARELY KNEW THE GUY"

In the annals of selective memory loss, few cases rival the collective amnesia afflicting the elite circles that once orbited Jeffrey Epstein like planets around a very, very dark sun. These titans of industry, political powerhouses, and cultural luminaries now find themselves in the awkward position of explaining why their names appear in black books, flight logs, and email chains with a convicted sex offender. Their unified response? "Jeffrey who?"

The Guest List Nobody Wants to Claim

Jeffrey Epstein's Rolodex read like a Who's Who of global power: former presidents, British royalty, tech billionaires, Hollywood celebrities, and Wall Street titans. These weren't casual acquaintances bumping into each other at the grocery store. We're talking about people who flew on his private jet (affectionately nicknamed the "Lolita Express"), visited his private island, attended his dinner parties, and sought his counsel on matters ranging from romantic advice to political strategy.

The newly released documents paint a picture of a man who, despite a 2008 conviction for soliciting prostitution from a minor, remained a trusted confidant to the powerful. Steve Bannon stayed at his home and sought his advice on European populism. Larry Summers discussed ranked-choice voting and personal matters with him until weeks before Epstein's 2019 arrest. Former White House counsel Kathryn Ruemmler consulted him about career decisions. Even spiritual guru Deepak Chopra exchanged emails about Trump controversies with the man.

The question isn't just "What did they know?" It's "How could they not know?"

The Innocence Defense: A Bridge Too Far

Many of Epstein's associates have rushed to declare their shock and horror upon learning of his crimes. But here's the thing: Epstein was a convicted sex offender. This wasn't classified information. It was public record. You didn't need security clearance or investigative journalism skills to discover that the man who invited you to his private island had pleaded guilty to soliciting prostitution from a 14-year-old girl.

Yet the parade of the powerful continued to his door. Why? Because in the rarefied air of the ultra-elite, a little thing like a sex crime conviction apparently doesn't warrant a second thought—or even a first one.

Here's where the "guilt by association" defense crumbles faster than a sandcastle at high tide: If you knew about Epstein's crimes and continued the relationship, that's not association—that's endorsement. If you genuinely didn't know (despite the public record), that speaks to a level of willful ignorance that's almost more damning.

The Shame Game: Why So Shy?

Which brings us to the central mystery: If these people did nothing wrong, why are they fighting so hard to keep their names out of the public eye?

The House of Representatives just passed a bill with an overwhelming 427-1 vote demanding the release of all unclassified Epstein-related documents. The lone dissenter, Rep. Clay Higgins, cited privacy concerns for "innocent individuals." Fair enough—victims absolutely deserve protection. But why do billionaires and former presidents need their identities shielded?

If your relationship with Epstein was purely professional, if you had no knowledge of his crimes, if you immediately severed ties upon learning the truth—then what's the problem? Stand up, own it, and move on. The desperate scramble for anonymity suggests something far more uncomfortable: that these individuals know exactly how their association looks, and they're terrified of the public connecting the dots.

The Ghislaine Maxwell Privilege Package

Speaking of uncomfortable truths, let's talk about Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein's partner in crime, currently serving 20 years for sex trafficking minors. Reports suggest she's receiving "elite privileges" in prison—a far cry from the conditions facing the average incarcerated person.

Maxwell was convicted of recruiting and grooming underage girls for Epstein's abuse. She was the facilitator, the enabler, the one who made the whole horrific operation run smoothly. Yet even behind bars, the protective bubble of elite status seems to cushion her fall. Why? Because even in disgrace, the powerful take care of their own.

Her interviews with the Department of Justice—in which she conveniently denied witnessing any wrongdoing by prominent figures—raise their own questions. Is this credible testimony, or is it the last service she can provide to the network that once elevated her?

The Trump Administration's Document Dilemma

Now we arrive at the current political hot potato: Why hasn't the Trump administration released the files?

President Trump's relationship with this issue has been a masterclass in political gymnastics. Initially, he dismissed the House vote as a "Democratic distraction." Then, after mounting pressure (and the release of emails tying him to Epstein), he reversed course and urged Republicans to support the bill, citing the importance of "transparency."

The irony is thick enough to cut with a knife. Trump has the executive authority to order the release of these documents without waiting for legislation. He could pick up the phone, call the Justice Department, and make it happen. Yet he hasn't.

The Department of Justice released a memo in July 2025 claiming there was no evidence of an "Epstein client list" or blackmail operation. This statement was met with widespread skepticism, and for good reason. Tens of thousands of pages of documents have been released, containing names, communications, and connections that paint a very different picture.

The Senate's Moment of Truth

The ball is now in the Senate's court. The House has spoken with a nearly unanimous voice. Survivors of Epstein's abuse, including Annie Farmer, have pleaded for transparency, citing years of "institutional betrayal." The public is watching.

Will the Republican-controlled Senate follow through? Or will the legislation quietly die in committee, another casualty of the elite's preference for discretion over disclosure?

The political calculation is delicate. Supporting the bill means potentially exposing powerful allies. Opposing it means looking like you're protecting predators. It's a lose-lose situation—unless, of course, you actually care about justice for victims more than protecting the reputations of the rich and famous.

The Real Question: What Are They Hiding?

Here's what we know: Epstein maintained relationships with powerful people for decades. He offered advice, arranged meetings, hosted parties, and cultivated an image as a philanthropist and intellectual. His "black book" contained over 1,000 names. His flight logs documented trips with presidents and princes. His emails reveal intimate conversations with political operatives, business leaders, and cultural figures.

And yet, we're told there's nothing to see here. No client list. No blackmail. Just a lone predator and his accomplice, operating in a vacuum.

Does anyone actually believe that?

The documents already released tell a different story. They show a man deeply embedded in elite circles, whose criminal behavior was an open secret, and who faced virtually no social consequences until his arrest in 2019. They show powerful people seeking his counsel, staying at his homes, and maintaining relationships long after his conviction.

Justice Delayed Is Justice Denied

For Epstein's victims, this isn't about political theater or partisan point-scoring. It's about accountability. It's about finally getting answers to questions that have haunted them for years: Who knew? Who helped? Who looked the other way?

The overwhelming House vote represents a rare moment of bipartisan agreement that transparency matters. The survivors who stood at that news conference deserve more than empty promises. They deserve the truth.

The Bottom Line

If you were friends with Jeffrey Epstein and genuinely didn't know about his crimes, then release the documents and let the facts speak for themselves. If you cut ties immediately upon learning the truth, then you have nothing to hide.

But if you're fighting to keep your name out of the public record, if you're claiming privacy protections designed for victims, if you're using your wealth and influence to bury the truth—then the public has every right to ask: What exactly are you afraid we'll find?

The Epstein case isn't just about one man's crimes. It's about a system that protected him, a network that enabled him, and a culture of elite impunity that allowed him to operate in plain sight for decades.

The Senate now has a choice: Stand with survivors and demand transparency, or stand with the powerful and maintain the cover-up.

The whole world is watching. And this time, "I don't recall" isn't going to cut it.

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing." — Edmund Burke

In the case of Jeffrey Epstein, too many "good" people did nothing for far too long. It's time for that to change.