The Book That Wasn’t Supposed to Exist - Epstein's Birthday Book Released!
There's a story about halfway through the Epstein birthday book written in a child's handwriting which seems to be titled Uncle F makes Makes Potty and it's about a grown man who doesn't know how to use a potty who defecates on the floor. This story written by a child is possibly the most tasteful story in the Epstein birthday book which was released by the House Oversight Committee last week. I'm not sure if Uncle F was supposed to be Jeffrey Epstein. The handwriting isn't great and it might be an E rather than an F.
But if the story was about Epstein, it highlights how in this book, which was written by his friends and given to him as a birthday gift, almost every story referred to him doing something revoling. I should point out early on that this video is not really appropriate for younger viewers as I'll be talking about politicians, business leaders, royals, and other nerdwells. Look, I've signed a number of birthday cards over the years, the kind that gets passed around at an office, and you don't always know the person it's for very well. I've usually written, "Happy birthday.
Hope you have a great day," or something like that. I might make a joke if I thought that the person would appreciate it. Jeffrey Epstein's birthday book is nothing like that. There were a few polite messages in there.
There was a nice note from his mom, for example. But things go downhill very, very quickly. This wasn't exactly a birthday card either. It was 238 pages long for one thing and bound in leather.
It appears to have been printed in three volumes, probably because of its length, and it was titled The First 50 Years. It was put together by Epstein's now jailed co-conspirator Maxwell in 2003 as a 50th birthday gift, and it contained messages from billionaires, politicians, Nobel Prize winners, childhood friends, former girlfriends, and a wide circle of Epstein's elite acquaintances. One contributor, the industrialist and Epstein art advisor Stuart Piver is credited by news sources for writing a limick about Epstein that sums up the overall tone of the book. It ends, "Though up to no good, whenever he could has avoided the penitentiary." Among the contributors were people like Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, and the UK's recently sacked ambassador to the United States, Lord Mandolson....
Watch the full video by Patrick Boyle on YouTube.