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How Many Jeffrey Epsteins Are There?


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Goodman Brown was a young, pious man, from a family of “honest men and good Christians since the days of the martyrs,” when he first discovered that the society around him was full of evil hiding in plain sight. Brown, the main character of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s 1835 short story “Young Goodman Brown,” is a 17th-century New England Puritan of good standing who nonetheless finds himself mysteriously drawn into the forest — that ancient literary symbol of foreboding — one night. The culmination of his phantasmagoric silvan journey is the discovery of a secret Satanic ceremony, led by Old Scratch himself, where all Brown’s fellow villagers, including those of purportedly high esteem, are in attendance. “There,” the devilish figure intones, “are all whom ye have reverenced from youth. Ye deemed them holier than yourselves, and shrank from your own sin, contrasting it with their lives of righteousness and prayerful aspirations heavenward. Yet here are they all in my worshipping assembly.”

It wasn’t quite devil-worship that emerged as a regular elite pastime on July 6, 2019, when police arrested Jeffrey Epstein — though who knows what we’ll learn after Thursday’s arrest of Ghislaine Maxwell, his enigmatic accomplice. But as the crimes of the mysterious financier, sex trafficker, and serial sexual abuser came fuller into public view, so did his highly disconcerting degree of association with our own elite. Just a partial listing of those who, to some degree, counted themselves among Epstein’s associates includes: presidents Bill Clinton and Donald Trump; lesser politicians such as Bill Richardson, George Mitchell, and John Glenn; British royal family member Prince Andrew; academics Steven Pinker, Lawrence Summers, and Alan Dershowitz; Hollywood heavies Chris Tucker, Kevin Spacey, Harvey Weinstein, and Woody Allen; billionaires Bill Gates and Leslie Wexner; media fixtures Chelsea Handler, George Stephanopoulos, Katie Couric, and Charlie Rose; and many, many more. Some of these figures are, of course, less guilty than others; Pinker and Handler, for example, were merely at some point meal guests during Epstein’s attempt to ensconce himself among the elite, whereas Prince Andrew’s and Bill Clinton’s hands are far dirtier. Even institutions, such as Harvard University and MIT, would stain themselves by accepting Epstein’s money. As Alana Goodman and Daniel Halper put it in their recent book A Convenient Death: The Mysterious Death of Jeffrey Epstein, many of his friends and associates are “still enjoying life from their perch at the upper echelon of our political, elite class.”:snip:

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Why the Epstein Scandal May Be the Most Important Story of the Decade

The Epstein underage sex-trafficking and blackmail story may be the most important story of the decade. It is a parable for much that has gone wrong with Western civilization, the story of the corruption of a ruling elite not merely on a human level but on a spiritual one, the explanation of our current condition.:snip:

 

 

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