Epstein Files: The 6 Names the DOJ Didn't Want You to See
Amongst the three million files released by the Department of Justice last week was an email from Jess Staley, the former CEO of Barclays that perfectly captures the contempt the people implicated in the Epstein files had for ordinary people. In February 2014, while riots were erupting in Brazil over the spiraling cost of living and the billions being wasted on the FIFA World Cup, Staley sent a message to his friend Jeffrey Epstein, writing, "You want to know why we're not Sao Paulo? Watch the TV ads on the Super Bowl. It's all about hip blacks in hip cars with white women.
The group that should be in the streets has been bought off by Jay-Z." It's a remarkably blunt admission of the disdain this circle had for the public. They saw a population so easily distracted by televised entertainment that they would ignore the fact that the people sending these emails were busy treating the world as their private playground. This is why people are now using the term the Epstein class to describe a protected tier of wealthy individuals who seem to operate under a completely different set of rules to everyone else. The sheer arrogance of this group was on full display this week during an interview on LBC radio with a woman named Lady Victoria Hervey who was a former girlfriend of Andrew Mountbatten Windsor.
Andrew, of course, is the man who, despite all the young girls he kissed, managed to transform from a prince into a frog after his brother, King Charles III, stripped him of his titles and honors last year. Hervey suggested to the host that because Jeffrey Epstein knew everybody that was very powerful, not being named in the files should actually be considered an insult. She claimed that if your name isn't there, it simply means you're a bit of a loser. The radio host responded, "That's an astonishing attitude.
I find that jaw-dropping after Hervey confirmed with a laugh that her name had indeed come up in the files." I of course had to check for myself and she is mentioned at least 20 times mostly for her tweets and social photographs including images of her with the US president and even the head of the FBI. This combination of absolute disdain for regular people, the fact that so many of these figures still occupy key roles in society ...
Watch the full video by Patrick Boyle on YouTube.