Wednesday, March 11, 2026

The Unfortunate Demise of Jeffrey Epstein

 If any one thing suggested psychiatric weakness it is irrationality or a lack of perspective.  When I was a child, there was one sure way I would learn.  If I made a mistake and was punished, then that punitive scenario where I was in the doghouse evoked an awareness in my consciousness that willed me never to let that happen again.  We could call it the paddle or the spanking.  This is a much contested action in our current climate of Political Correctness, an era where we have been willing to let our children stray to a point of self destruction.  Tough love is more a part of nostalgic or historic American life, when a child had to walk five miles to school and back each day.  Basically it was a moral lesson or kind of Aesop's Fable, a miniature Star Trek or Andy Griffith episode, that taught you something.  Then what it taught was a moral or ethical lesson about treating one's fellow man as yourself.  In a nutshell we were aware of a code of living, a Christian ethic or ethos shaped by the Ten Commandments, that attempted to make our lives better by tempering our animal instincts.  If we were going to live on this planet together in societies, then we needed to behave a particular way.  Abstractly politics once represented this same idea.  Diplomacy uses intellect and wisdom mined from experience to dispel human conflict.  The underlying premise is man needs or requires peace and serenity to survive.  Peace ensures that our planet and the human race may survive aside from a God-created cataclysmic disaster.  The crucial postulate is man desires peace rather than conflict or war.  Economics have changed that perspective, and the intense lure of wealth or the power of the dollar to disguise suffering and create a bubble of bliss has necessitated conflict and war.  It would seem we as a nation have lost the ability to create an economy based on human need.  Human need would in most circumstance not include murder, if we had souls.  The souls with which we are born and are nurtured in childhood have been undermined.  Without our own personal awareness we have succumbed to temptation, a universal vice described in the Bible and Jesus' teachings.  Temptation and addiction have consumed American life.  God forgives, and those who seek redemption can enter the kingdom of heaven.  We are weak, and a force as strong as God and perhaps more persuasive has consumed our lives.  It is call Evil.  Satan or the devil only manifests himself through human form, and the elected regime we have today in America clearly is an example of this Evil.  It is rife with the trappings of mental illness, irrational thought and behavior, and the most devastating, a serpent-like ability to speak and mold to any situation promoting one's own agenda whether ethical or not.  Examples of this have emerged in our current and recently elected leaders.  After having received punishment as a child, certain things have solidified in my own code of conduct.  For me it was trusting others' advice.  Anytime I chose to do this and made a decision based upon what someone else suggested, I was bitten in the arse.  The conscious decision to follow someone else's suggestion resulted in a failure.  I learned to follow my own instincts and reflective decisions.  You know yourself best.  As an adult I have learned a variant route.  I will listen to others' opinions and experiences, because often I will learn something I did not know; I must separate my personal choice and process from their opinion.  The most disturbing and disruptive example of Evil today, other than the recent unconstitutional attacks on Venezuela and Iran circumventing Congresses' approval, is the murder of Jeffrey Epstein.  It should become clear to us, the American people, that those in power and possibly our elected leaders, have committed murder.  Not murder under the cloak of war, casualties that can be ascribed to some greater cause (whether fraudulent or not), but murder to conceal one's own crimes akin to the slaying of Jamal Kashoggi.  The death of Jeffrey Epstein is an example of such an egregious act.  As evidence continues to surface exposing a much greater atrocity, a blackmail ring connecting Russia with the United States, the plausibility of a murder to disguise such a scheme arises.  Epstein's death in a prison cell is similar to Vladimir Putin's blatant assassinations of undesirable state participants or rebels.  In Communist nations, such as Russian, China, and Iran, dissent or protest is met with slaughter.  These totalitarian regimes do not allow personal freedom nor freedom of speech.  Disagreement and recalcitrance to the state results in death.  Jeffry Epstein was murdered to cover up these high crimes, and he was murdered by those in power.  In all probability he was murdered by Donald Trump himself.  One of Donald Trump's most impressive skills, not unlike Bill Clinton, is to slip and slide his way out of adversity.  Underneath it may consist of a ruthless, antagonistic, and zealot set of sychophantic lawyers, not unlike those who plotted the murder of John F. Kennedy, but on the surface Donald Trump's smooth melismatic drawl has convinced America to elect him the leader of the free world not once, but twice.  Try to imagine a human being in a jail cell deserving of due process, but instead he is murdered in cold blood by his cell mate to conceal crimes of a high magnitude.  Those in power sanctioned his murder, hired a hit man, and covered up his assassination.  Jeffrey Epstein was an evil man of prominence supported and engaged with other evil men of prominence.  When threatened with exposure he was killed.  It should be chilling to every American that your death could be next.