Forbes traced Epstein’s fortune: $200 million from Wexner, $170 million from Leon Black. Two men funded 75% of a predator’s wealth while banks kept processing flagged transactions.
Read MorePosts tagged 2000s
The Victoria’s Secret Lie
Jeffrey Epstein never worked for Victoria’s Secret. But he told young women he did – for over a decade – while executives who knew about it looked the other way. The fake recruiting scheme was an active tool in his predation.
Read MoreThe House That Wexner Built
Leslie Wexner spent $25 million building Manhattan’s largest private residence. Then he gave it to Jeffrey Epstein for $0. Inside, FBI agents found hundreds of photos of nude girls and a safe full of evidence someone had already catalogued.
Read MoreThe Blank Check
In July 1991, Leslie Wexner signed over complete power of attorney to Jeffrey Epstein – a man with no degree, no credentials, and no other known billionaire clients. That document became the foundation for everything Epstein built.
Read MoreThe 9/11 Bill Comes Due
How 24 Years of Post-9/11 Fiscal Fantasy Led to Trump’s Hidden Tax on Working Families
Read MoreIsrael’s Convenient Presence
Let me preference this post by saying that I know I said I was going to post an important essay on 9/11 – but this ain’t it.
This comes from coming across a Twitter thread about a 2002 Salon story ab…
Read MoreWhen a Sex Offender and a Former Prime Minister Built a Surveillance Company
Epstein used Ehud Barak to embed himself in the surveillance industry Yesterday, over 100,000 emails from former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Barak’s inbox were leaked by a hacker group called… Read More
Who Needs the Epstein Files? Trump’s Modeling Agency Was a Documented Trafficking Operation
Court documents, victim testimony, and immigration records reveal how Trump Model Management systematically exploited teenage girls – while everyone chases phantom client lists. I was going back through my notes… Read More
Worker Subsidies: The Hidden Cost of Low Wages
When people fight against a living wage, they’re really defending a system that lets big corporations off the hook. Take Walmart, one of the most profitable companies out there. They make billions every year, yet tons of their employees rely on government assistance like SNAP just to get by.
That’s not an accident – it’s a business model. By paying low wages, Walmart shifts the burden onto taxpayers. We’re basically subsidizing their payroll with our tax dollars.
Read MoreThe Epstein Files Don’t Tell Us Anything New
They are completely useless since they are so highly redacted. They literally do not provide any new information So, for everyone on both sides hoping for a big reveal –… Read More