“Everyone Knew”: The Statement That Undermines Trump’s Epstein Denials (2/13/26) Podcast Por  arte de portada

“Everyone Knew”: The Statement That Undermines Trump’s Epstein Denials (2/13/26)

“Everyone Knew”: The Statement That Undermines Trump’s Epstein Denials (2/13/26)

Escúchala gratis

Ver detalles del espectáculo
Newly surfaced reporting that Donald Trump allegedly told Palm Beach Police Chief Michael Reiter after Jeffrey Epstein’s first arrest that “everyone knew” what Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell were has triggered a predictable attempt to recast him as a whistleblower. But the timing undercuts that narrative. A whistleblower acts before or during the commission of crimes, not after an arrest has already made the conduct public. A post-arrest phone call acknowledging what was widely known does not constitute risk, exposure, or meaningful accountability; it looks more like reputational positioning once the scandal was unavoidable. Framing this as bravery ignores the central issue: the statement suggests awareness, not ignorance.

That awareness collides directly with Trump’s later public posture that he knew little or nothing about Epstein or Maxwell. If “everyone knew,” then claims of total ignorance become difficult to reconcile. The real vulnerability here isn’t proximity alone—it’s inconsistency. Political damage often stems less from association than from shifting explanations meant to manage that association. The effort to brand this episode as heroic only amplifies the contradiction, because it highlights prior knowledge while leaving prior denials intact. In a scandal defined by elite impunity and public distrust, credibility—not spin—is the currency that determines whether a narrative survives.


to contact me

bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
Todavía no hay opiniones