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Monday, February 2, 2026

U Can't Touch This

The next Epstein files data dump took place last weekend, and every page of it seems worse than the last. We have vast amounts of money changing hands, pleas for inclusion at the “wildest parties,” and tales of sexual abuse, rape, torture, and:

Alan Cumming would agree, “Traitors” is certainly the right label for this lot.

The Deputy AG says there is even more that they’re holding back because it’s too graphic and horrifying.

There is a mountain of circumstantial evidence. We can only assume that there is smoking gun evidence out there as well, but the DOJ will certainly not release that, not about the president, and not about his supporters, donors, or anyone who can attest that he was on the island.

So the question is, “Is anyone going to do anything about it?

I say, obviously not. If the DOJ were going to prosecute these crimes, they’d have at least started it already. But other than some unproven allegations against the Clintons, the legal trail is ice cold. TFG’s name is all over the place, with over 3000 mentions. Can ALL of them really be a hoax, like the Administration flaks claim? Not on your life. But if the DOJ won’t act, who can?

The states? If I understand correctly, all of this activity took place on a private island, which, I presume, is out of US jurisdiction. Maybe somewhere in all that material is evidence of something that took place in the US, and that state can take up the case. Although if so, it’s probably Florida, so forget about that angle. Governor DeSantis would probably use the information to squeeze TFG into naming him VEEP, SecState, or his personal butler, in exchange for not prosecuting.

Trump Towers may be a viable location, and NY State would certainly pursue charges if it could. But I think even this dotard’s reptilian mind knows enough not to bang minors where he eats.

The DOJ needs to be questioned about why the names of non-victims were redacted. The ONLY allowable redactions were to be for the girls who were assaulted or otherwise involved. There is no tangible reason to redact the names of the predators other than to cover them up and shield from public scrutiny and retaliation. So we can clearly see whose side the DOJ is taking. It’s not the victims and it’s not the public, it’s the rich pervs who used their money and privilege to rape and abuse teenage girls.

I don’t think there will be any meaningful prosecutions until such time as there is a Democratic administration. And that’s only if the evidence manages to survive being in the possession of a corrupt Justice Department for the next three years, which is doubtful.

What we’re seeing here is a group of rich and powerful men, including the US president, thumbing their noses at the rest of us and saying, “What are you going to do about it?” They know what they did, and we know what they did, and they’re celebrating the fact that we still can’t touch them.

This is ANOTHER reason why there will be heavy interference with the next two elections. Those involved know they’re looking at jail time if they ever lose their governmental cover. Although I wouldn’t put it past them to secretly bankroll a Democratic presidential candidate under the condition that they not pursue charges against them. Or maybe they bankroll a Dem who has been to The Island and has as much to lose as anyone else. Having piles of money seems to solve a lot of problems, doesn’t it?

The ongoing erosion of our Constitutional rights is another lever to press, both to distract from the Epstein mess and to depress and weaken opposition.

At some point, they’re counting on the rest of us to go “Oh, screw it, what’s the point?”

That’s the point when they win. We have to continue to care and continue to act.

If we give up, we deserve what we get.

2 comments:

  1. It doesn't matter how "graphic and horrifying" it is. Congress required them to release all of it, except for redactions to protect the names of the victims, and to do so by a deadline which is now long past. Everyone at the DoJ involved in slow-walking this needs to be arrested.

    Epstein's island is part of the US Virgin Islands territory and so is indeed under US jurisdiction. The problem with prosecution is the statute of limitations -- most of this stuff happened a long time ago. That doesn't mean there can't be justice. The DoJ estimates that there were over a thousand victims, so the number of Epstein's child-abusing clients must be in at least the hundreds. The names of each and every one of them need to be exposed and the evidence of what they did made public. They need to be hounded out of their political (or Hollywood, in many cases) careers, hunted and hated and never feeling safe for the rest of their lives. It will gut the leadership of both political parties and the entertainment industry, but I don't care. Everybody who was involved in this needs to go down.

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  2. Thanks for the clarification of the Island's domain. Unfortunately, it doesn't help, nor does the statute of limitations angle.

    However, murder has no statute of limitations, so that could be a heavy prosecutorial weight. But of course, that's the part that Justice is withholding.

    I agree, everything needs to be released, and I'm sure they're busy redacting the guilty names out of more documents. If there's to be any real breakthrough in evidence, it's going to have to come from another source.

    If there's ever a true regime change, this group at Justice should be tried immediately. The only ones with consciences already resigned.

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