Victims who stood up — physically stood up — in that room.
Victims who said, clearly and publicly: We asked to be interviewed. We are still willing to be interviewed. And no one from these investigations has interviewed us.
There comes a point where you stop asking whether you’re being lied to… and you start asking whether anyone in power even cares that you know you’re being lied to. Because when the Attorney General of the United States sits before Congress, raises her right hand, swears an oath to tell the truth, and then proceeds to dodge, deflect, and filibuster her way through basic questions about justice in this country — and nothing happens — you begin to wonder if the whole exercise is
Millions of pages. Years of anticipation. Endless promises of transparency. And yet, when the Department of Justice finally released what it called “the rest” of the Epstein files, the public was left asking the same question we’ve been asking for years: what did we actually learn? The DOJ’s recent release — over three million pages of documents, emails, court filings, and exhibits — was supposed to provide clarity about the Epstein case and the powerful people connected to i
Let’s put a few things aside for just a moment. Let’s ignore that President Trump is once again threatening to invoke the Insurrection Act to send troops into Minnesota because courts keep reminding him he’s not allowed to do that. Let’s ignore that much of the GOP — and its MAGA faithful — are still insisting that Renee Good was a deranged lunatic and that the ICE officer who killed her was some kind of action-movie hero. Let’s pretend Trump isn’t still talking about Greenla