The Epstein files: 'Truthful hyperbole'?


Seeking justice: Protesters holding a giant photo of Trump and Epstein on the National Mall near the US Capitol. — Getty Images/TNS

BILL Clinton, Bill Gates, Noam Chomsky and Woody Allen were among the familiar faces in the latest batch of photographs released by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee in connection to the late Jeffrey Epstein.

With the Justice Department preparing to make additional files public, the images underscore an uncomfortable truth for us all: The convicted sex offender moved comfortably among some of the most intelligent men in the world. Rhodes scholars, technology leaders and artists.

Also in the release was a photograph of a woman’s lower leg and foot on what appears to be a bed, with a paperback copy of Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita visible in the background. The 1955 novel centres on a middle-aged man’s sexual obsession with a 12-year-old girl. Epstein, a serial sexual abuser, famously nicknamed one of his private planes “The Lolita Express.” And we are to believe that some of the globe’s brightest minds could not put the dots together?

Donald Trump, who once described himself as “a very stable genius,” included.

“I’ve known Jeff for 15 years. Terrific guy,” Trump told New York magazine in 2002. “He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”

Later, the two had a public falling out, and Trump has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing. Great. But denial after the fact is only one side of this story.

The other is harder to digest: Either the self-proclaimed “very stable genius” spent nearly two decades around Epstein without recognising what was happening in plain sight – or he recognised it and chose silence.

Neither explanation reflects on intelligence as much as it does on character. No wonder Trump’s defenders keep raising the most overused word in American politics today: hoax.

“Once again, House Democrats are selectively releasing cherry-picked photos with random redactions to try and create a false narrative,” said White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson.

Jackson has a point.

Democrats were cherry-picking which photos to release, even if many of the men pictured were aligned with progressives. That includes the president, who was a Democrat when he and Epstein were running together in New York in the 2000s. Trump didn’t register as a Republican until 2009.

Now whether the choice of photos and timing was designed to shield political friends or weaponise against perceived enemies isn’t clear. What is clear is that it doesn’t take a genius to see that none of this is a hoax.

The victims are real. The flight logs are real. The millions that flowed into Epstein’s bank account have wire transfer confirmation numbers that can be traced. What Democrats are doing with the information is politics as usual. And you don’t want politics to dictate who gets justice and who gets vilified.

Whatever the politicians’ intentions, Americans can decide how to react to the disclosures. And what the men around Epstein did with the information they gathered on his jet or his island fits squarely at the heart of the national conversation about masculinity. What kind of men could allow such abuse to continue?

I’m not saying the intelligent men in Epstein’s ecosystem did something criminal, but the lack of whistleblowing before his arrest raises questions about their fortitude for right and wrong. And the Trump White House trying to characterise this conversation as a partisan witch hunt – a hoax – is an ineffective strategy because the pattern with their use of that word is so clear.

We saw what happened on Jan 6, and Trump tells us the investigation is a hoax. We hear the recording of him pressuring Georgia officials to find votes, and he tells us the investigation is a hoax.

In his book, Art of the Deal, Trump framed his lies as “truthful hyperbole” but by now we should understand for him hyperbole matters more than truth – and his felony convictions confirm that some of his claims were indeed simply false.

So if there is a hoax, it is the notion that none of the brilliant men whom Epstein kept in his orbit had any idea what was going on. — Los Angeles Times/TNS

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
US , Trump , Epstein

Next In Focus

At the centrestage of Asean�
#coldplaygate: Speaking out against the ritual shaming of the woman
The movie I was afraid to see
What next for the high speed rail to Singapore?
Dawn of the new age
Will the age cap for youth reflect lived realities?
Budgeting for ‘new youth’ transition
SME Malaysia: Those over 30 still need support
Gateway to Sarawak: Such great heights
Bear scare in Akita

Others Also Read