
(The picture is in the public domain and does seem to have some satirical impact at this time!)
The victims of Jeffrey Epstein should have their time now.
Jeffrey Epstein had powerful friends who protected him again and again. Only after many years was he tried and sentenced to prison.
And now the question remains, should we publicize the names of those who received favors from him, namely young women and rides on his plane.
Historically I must tell you the names in these types of scandals never seem to get disclosed. I have read of cases of famous womens’ diaries, bordello madams customer lists and many other such scandals. The names never make it out.
Many years ago, one of my instructors was an old law officer in the State of Oklahoma. He told me lots of stories. Before election days, they’d raid the brothels to appease the Baptist voters. He laughed about finding all kinds of city and state officials in those raids — but their names didn’t get disclosed either.
But time has passed and perhaps things are changing. We as a nation have been talking about victim’s rights for quite some time with very variable results. (I have been more than a little disappointed.)
It is only just and honorable that we pay attention to the women abused in this case. The fact that powerful men and women participated in their abuse makes their memories, their testimony, all the more important.
And it is not happening. We get the occasional minor story but when are we going to get a major network interviewing fifteen survivors in a group and putting those interviews on television. Maybe I’m an amateur when it comes to broadcasting but isn’t that what television news was designed to do?
Where’s the print media? Are those who victimized these women so powerful that fear and cowardice grips the entertainment industry, the news networks and the great mass of journalists?
I have to wonder.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/articles/epstein-victims-growing-political-threat-040042411.html
(Quoted directly from the article linked to above.)The women whom Jeffrey Epstein abused demand to be heard.
And their voices — long suppressed, but now emerging powerfully and with courage — could further fuel the maelstrom around President Donald Trump and aides who dig the scandal deeper each time they try to end it.
These are women who’ve been let down for years, at multiple levels, by a government that was supposed to keep them safe. Their families are victims, too, since abuse sows trauma through generations. (End quote.)
The main fact before us is simple, very simple. We may not have the lists of those who participated in the abuse but we can always just ask the women abused.
Why don’t we do it?
James Alan Pilant
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