{"id":55268,"date":"2024-01-08T13:58:41","date_gmt":"2024-01-08T18:58:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/nlpc.org\/?p=55268"},"modified":"2024-01-08T15:10:56","modified_gmt":"2024-01-08T20:10:56","slug":"unfortunately-for-bill-gates-jeffrey-epstein-story-is-not-going-away","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/nlpc.org\/featured-news\/unfortunately-for-bill-gates-jeffrey-epstein-story-is-not-going-away\/","title":{"rendered":"Unfortunately for Bill Gates, Jeffrey Epstein Story is Not Going Away"},"content":{"rendered":"
On May 6, my microphone was cut and I was arrested<\/a> at the Berkshire Hathaway<\/a> shareholders\u2019 meeting<\/a> with Warren Buffett<\/a> in the chair. My transgression? I uttered the name of Jeffrey Epstein<\/a> while citing the reputational risk to the company posed by Buffett\u2019s close identification with Bill Gates<\/a>. (The ludicrous charge of criminal trespass was soon after dropped<\/a>.)<\/p>\n Since that time, things have only gotten worse for Gates.<\/p>\n On December 17, the Wall Street Journal<\/em> published yet another story<\/a> titled, \u201cJeffrey Epstein Never Stopped Abusing Women\u2014and His VIP Circle Helped Make It Possible.\u201d The opening paragraph:<\/p>\n In March 2014,\u00a0Jeffrey Epstein\u00a0took his private jet to Seattle to visit\u00a0Bill Gates\u00a0at his office. Epstein brought along a Polish model he had met a few months earlier. Dressed in a long gray coat, she posed for a photo with the Microsoft<\/a> co-founder. Epstein took the picture.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n Gates is not the only billionaire touched by the Epstein scandal, but he has become the poster child for it, and this is not unfair. Gates had recast himself as a full-time humanitarian so successfully that even Warren Buffett had to jump on board. But when you hold yourself out as humanity\u2019s savior, there\u2019s little room for moral equivocation. People worldwide understand this. That\u2019s why no matter how furiously Gates tries to regain control of his public persona, or how much he spends to do it, he is destined to fail.<\/p>\n The Epstein story is not going away, nor are the problems it creates for Gates. There exist parallel mysteries of the true nature of Epstein\u2019s enterprise, and Gates\u2019 actual relationship with the pedophile.<\/p>\n It is speculated that Epstein was the point man, or at least participated in, an intelligence operation. If this is the case, it might explain a few things, such as the lenient plea deal to which Epstein agreed in 2008 that had approval from the highest levels of the Justice Department. It also guarantees that the questions about Epstein will go on for many years, for the release of documents will be very slow.<\/p>\n Such a guarantee is not essential, however, to public fascination with the case. In the fifth year out from Epstein\u2019s death, look at the response to last week\u2019s release of documents related to a defamation lawsuit by Epstein victim Virginia Giuffre against Ghislaine Maxwell. Consider also a recent interview<\/a> with Epstein\u2019s brother Mark by Tucker Carlson. Mark Epstein cannot be accused of promoting \u201cconspiracy theories.\u201d He describes the stone wall he has hit in getting information about his brother\u2019s death and poses credible questions about the suicide ruling.<\/p>\n The biggest reason the Epstein case will not go away, however, has nothing to do with its particulars. Instead, it has to do with the power of allegory, and current perceptions of the way the world works. People correctly believe that the rich and powerful get away with great crimes, while the rest of us operate under legal, moral and economic constraints. It\u2019s unlikely this will change anytime soon, ensuring the relevance of the Epstein archetype for a long time.<\/p>\n