Far from being the staggering betrayal that some proclaim with naive haste, and far from signaling the political demise of a president whom many have sought to bury at every turn for the last decade, the apparent closure of the Epstein file by federal authorities must be read in the light of a proven strategy: that of a baiting operation of devious complexity, wherein feint and evasion constitute the true weapons of an information war being waged far beyond the civil courts. For what the quick-witted and the hasty commentators label a dismal failure or an ultimate compromise is, for one who knows how to observe the profound mechanics of events, merely the prelude to a much vaster denouement—a maneuver consisting of making the adversary believe he has won the battle, of letting him revel in his factitious triumph on a ground he thinks he controls, only to watch him collapse when the true battlefield, that of high treason and national security, is finally revealed to him in its full scope. The current clamor of the Normies, disappointed and shaken, thus contrasts with the knowing silence of the initiated, these Anons who recognize the signature of a long-matured operation, whose logic necessarily escapes those who stop at the froth of appearances.
To grasp the import of such a tactic, one need only recall the precedent, in every respect similar, of the Durham investigation into the alleged Russian collusion, which, once its report was delivered without major civil indictments, was celebrated by the dominant media as proof of the plot's nonexistence, a damp squib that left the Obama administration and its minions cleared of all suspicion; and yet, while many were crying defeat for Trump and an end to his accusations, true justice was following its subterranean course, far from the corrupt civil courts where, as experience had shown with the acquittals of Sussmann and Danchenko, no fair verdict could be hoped for. And now, months later, the trap springs shut: the very same central figures once thought untouchable, the likes of Brennan and Comey, former directors of the CIA and FBI, find themselves under criminal investigation for their role in this machination, demonstrating that the closing of a civil chapter was but a step toward opening the criminal file on solid ground. The parallel with the Epstein case is striking: the FBI declares the investigation closed at the level of the suicide, an official nothingburger, while the affair itself, by its very nature—implicating international blackmail networks, foreign intelligence services like Mossad, and the systemic corruption of the political elite—falls not under common justice, but under an exceptional jurisdiction, a potentially military one, alone capable of judging such crimes against the state.
This strategy of the false retreat and the lure, this perverse game of pushing one's enemy to expose himself by dangling the prospect of an easy victory, is in fact a constant, the common thread of all the great battles waged by the former administration. One remembers the episode, grotesque in appearance, of Kellyanne Conway putting her feet up on a sofa in the Oval Office, an image designed to provoke a media outcry and thus force the press, in its critical frenzy, to unwittingly broadcast pictures of a reception for Black pastors supporting a president they were striving to paint as a racist. One recalls the long saga of the tax returns, withheld for years to stoke curiosity and accusation, until the star MSNBC anchor, Rachel Maddow, exulting in finally holding the ultimate scoop, revealed live on air a document that showed a president paying more in taxes than his detractors, turning an anticipated bombshell into a media fiasco. What of the impeachment, where the damning testimony of Ambassador Gordon Sondland, trumpeting a quid pro quo in the morning, deflated by the afternoon into a mere "personal presumption," leaving the prosecution stunned and disarmed? Each time, the same pattern repeats itself: a seemingly disadvantageous situation, an exposed vulnerability, a feigned retreat, all of which serve only to draw the adversary onto mined territory where he will ultimately destroy himself.
It is precisely this score that is being played out today. By demanding himself that we "stop talking about Jeffrey Epstein," by letting his allies, from Pam Bondi to others, express their supposed dismay, Trump stokes the fire he feigns to extinguish, provoking a 1200% increase in searches on the subject and forcing the hand of the Democrats and the media who, thinking they finally have him, are now themselves demanding the publication of a list that will incriminate them first and foremost. The popular pressure, skillfully orchestrated, thus moves from the circle of initiates to the entire planet, making inevitable a full disclosure that could not have occurred without this apparent consensus. The finality is therefore not the affair's suffocation, but its amplification on a global scale, where it will no longer be a matter of just revealing names on a list, but of bringing the entire temple of corruption crashing down. Far from being dead, Epstein is undoubtedly the keystone of this operation, a capital witness placed under protection in a relocation program, whose revelations, when the time comes, will have the devastating force that is promised to be biblical.
Are you done yet? there is no justification, NONE, no matter how lengthy and twisted, for allowing 'buyers' to keep buying for even one more day. #SAVETHECHILDREN
Where is your information coming from that indicates President Trump is complicit in allowing continued trafficking of children? How did you arrive at this absurd conclusion?
The passage argues that the apparent closure of the Epstein case is not a defeat or cover-up, but a deliberate strategic move—part of a broader information war designed to mislead opponents and ultimately expose deeper corruption. It claims this tactic mirrors the Durham investigation, which initially seemed like a failure but later led to criminal probes of key intelligence figures. The author sees a pattern: the Trump administration often feigns weakness or retreats to lure opponents into overplaying their hand—only to later reverse the narrative to its advantage.
According to this view, Trump’s seeming indifference and his allies’ public disappointment are calculated moves to stir public interest and bait media and political enemies into calling for disclosures that will ultimately backfire on them. The narrative ends with a provocative claim: that Epstein may still be alive under protection, poised to testify as part of a dramatic reckoning that will expose a global web of elite corruption.
Judges 2:18
And when the Lord raised them up judges, then the Lord was with the judge, and delivered them out of the hand of their enemies all the days of the judge: for it repented the Lord because of their groanings by reason of them that oppressed them and vexed them.
Far from being the staggering betrayal that some proclaim with naive haste, and far from signaling the political demise of a president whom many have sought to bury at every turn for the last decade, the apparent closure of the Epstein file by federal authorities must be read in the light of a proven strategy: that of a baiting operation of devious complexity, wherein feint and evasion constitute the true weapons of an information war being waged far beyond the civil courts. For what the quick-witted and the hasty commentators label a dismal failure or an ultimate compromise is, for one who knows how to observe the profound mechanics of events, merely the prelude to a much vaster denouement—a maneuver consisting of making the adversary believe he has won the battle, of letting him revel in his factitious triumph on a ground he thinks he controls, only to watch him collapse when the true battlefield, that of high treason and national security, is finally revealed to him in its full scope. The current clamor of the Normies, disappointed and shaken, thus contrasts with the knowing silence of the initiated, these Anons who recognize the signature of a long-matured operation, whose logic necessarily escapes those who stop at the froth of appearances.
To grasp the import of such a tactic, one need only recall the precedent, in every respect similar, of the Durham investigation into the alleged Russian collusion, which, once its report was delivered without major civil indictments, was celebrated by the dominant media as proof of the plot's nonexistence, a damp squib that left the Obama administration and its minions cleared of all suspicion; and yet, while many were crying defeat for Trump and an end to his accusations, true justice was following its subterranean course, far from the corrupt civil courts where, as experience had shown with the acquittals of Sussmann and Danchenko, no fair verdict could be hoped for. And now, months later, the trap springs shut: the very same central figures once thought untouchable, the likes of Brennan and Comey, former directors of the CIA and FBI, find themselves under criminal investigation for their role in this machination, demonstrating that the closing of a civil chapter was but a step toward opening the criminal file on solid ground. The parallel with the Epstein case is striking: the FBI declares the investigation closed at the level of the suicide, an official nothingburger, while the affair itself, by its very nature—implicating international blackmail networks, foreign intelligence services like Mossad, and the systemic corruption of the political elite—falls not under common justice, but under an exceptional jurisdiction, a potentially military one, alone capable of judging such crimes against the state.
This strategy of the false retreat and the lure, this perverse game of pushing one's enemy to expose himself by dangling the prospect of an easy victory, is in fact a constant, the common thread of all the great battles waged by the former administration. One remembers the episode, grotesque in appearance, of Kellyanne Conway putting her feet up on a sofa in the Oval Office, an image designed to provoke a media outcry and thus force the press, in its critical frenzy, to unwittingly broadcast pictures of a reception for Black pastors supporting a president they were striving to paint as a racist. One recalls the long saga of the tax returns, withheld for years to stoke curiosity and accusation, until the star MSNBC anchor, Rachel Maddow, exulting in finally holding the ultimate scoop, revealed live on air a document that showed a president paying more in taxes than his detractors, turning an anticipated bombshell into a media fiasco. What of the impeachment, where the damning testimony of Ambassador Gordon Sondland, trumpeting a quid pro quo in the morning, deflated by the afternoon into a mere "personal presumption," leaving the prosecution stunned and disarmed? Each time, the same pattern repeats itself: a seemingly disadvantageous situation, an exposed vulnerability, a feigned retreat, all of which serve only to draw the adversary onto mined territory where he will ultimately destroy himself.
It is precisely this score that is being played out today. By demanding himself that we "stop talking about Jeffrey Epstein," by letting his allies, from Pam Bondi to others, express their supposed dismay, Trump stokes the fire he feigns to extinguish, provoking a 1200% increase in searches on the subject and forcing the hand of the Democrats and the media who, thinking they finally have him, are now themselves demanding the publication of a list that will incriminate them first and foremost. The popular pressure, skillfully orchestrated, thus moves from the circle of initiates to the entire planet, making inevitable a full disclosure that could not have occurred without this apparent consensus. The finality is therefore not the affair's suffocation, but its amplification on a global scale, where it will no longer be a matter of just revealing names on a list, but of bringing the entire temple of corruption crashing down. Far from being dead, Epstein is undoubtedly the keystone of this operation, a capital witness placed under protection in a relocation program, whose revelations, when the time comes, will have the devastating force that is promised to be biblical.
BQQM!
Are you done yet? there is no justification, NONE, no matter how lengthy and twisted, for allowing 'buyers' to keep buying for even one more day. #SAVETHECHILDREN
Where is your information coming from that indicates President Trump is complicit in allowing continued trafficking of children? How did you arrive at this absurd conclusion?
A TL;DR version:
The passage argues that the apparent closure of the Epstein case is not a defeat or cover-up, but a deliberate strategic move—part of a broader information war designed to mislead opponents and ultimately expose deeper corruption. It claims this tactic mirrors the Durham investigation, which initially seemed like a failure but later led to criminal probes of key intelligence figures. The author sees a pattern: the Trump administration often feigns weakness or retreats to lure opponents into overplaying their hand—only to later reverse the narrative to its advantage.
According to this view, Trump’s seeming indifference and his allies’ public disappointment are calculated moves to stir public interest and bait media and political enemies into calling for disclosures that will ultimately backfire on them. The narrative ends with a provocative claim: that Epstein may still be alive under protection, poised to testify as part of a dramatic reckoning that will expose a global web of elite corruption.
Well written and super readable, whether AI or human generated
AI. As a french dude, my english level is far from that.
Well done, regardless, and thanQ
Judges 2:18 And when the Lord raised them up judges, then the Lord was with the judge, and delivered them out of the hand of their enemies all the days of the judge: for it repented the Lord because of their groanings by reason of them that oppressed them and vexed them.
Precisely