Sunday, April 12, 2026

 

The photo below is Melania and Donald on March 12, 1999 at a New York Knicks game. Melania knows. Alex Acosta knows. The victims know. Palm Beach Police know. FBI knows. They all know.
HERE IS A TIMELINE:
1998 – Donald and Melania are introduced by Paolo Zampolli (who ran a Milan modeling agency, now works for Trump and did so as well in his previous administration) at the Kit Kat Club in New York, where Jeffrey Epstein is also in attendance.
2002 – Trump says Epstein is “fun” and “a terrific guy.”
November 2004 - Donald Trump bought Maison de L'Amitie for $41.35 million (at the same time he was filing bankruptcy for Trump Hotels and Casinos Resorts) outbidding Jeffrey Epstein. Reportedly, losing the auction angered Epstein and led to the end of their relationship; for his part, Trump later said he banned Epstein from his Mar-a-Lago club and called him a creep. (Trump sold Maison de L’Amitie to Russian Oligarch, Dmitry Rybolovlev, in 2008 for $95M, without improvements.)
January 2005 – Donald and Melania are married. Zampolli and Epstein are in attendance.
March 2005 – Palm Beach Police open investigation into Epstein sexually abusing young girls. They found the abuse was going on as early as 2002.
September 2005 - Trump and Billy Bush were on a bus on their way to film an episode of Access Hollywood. In the video, Trump described his attempt to seduce a married woman and indicated he might start kissing a woman that he and Bush were about to meet. He added, "I don't even wait. And when you're a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. ... Grab 'em by the pussy. You can do anything."
July 2006 – Palm Beach County Grand Jury indicts Epstein on solicitation of prostitution. Palm Beach Police refer it to FBI because the local charge doesn't reflect "the totality of Epstein's conduct.”
July 2006 - Trump asks Stormy Daniels to join him for a meal. She did not want to accept the invitation but her publicist encouraged her to go. Melania Trump, was not at the tournament and had just given birth.
May 2007 – 60 more criminal counts against Epstein.
July 2007 – Epstein’s USAG Prosecutor was Alex Acosta, who later became Trump’s labor secretary, who offered to end the investigation of Epstein if he plead guilt to 2 local charges, register as a sex offender, and accept a prison term—which ended up being more like a resort with off campus working privileges—AND an NON-Prosecution Agreement. The sexual abuse of girls continues.
June 30, 2008 – Epstein pleads guilty to solicitation of prostitution and solicitation of prostitution of a minor under 18. Is sentenced to 18 months in a minimum security camp, being allowed to leave 12 hours per day.
July 7, 2008 – “Jane Doe” files a suit saying victims were not informed of the plea deal. In 2019, 11 years later, a judge ruled in their favor.
July 22, 2009 – Epstein is released after serving less than 13 months.
2010 – Epstein settles multiple civil law suits brought against him by his victims.
May 16, 2012 - Mary Kathleen Richardson Kennedy, wife of RFK Jr. (who was buddies with Epstein) and friend of Ghislaine is found dead—by hanging—after finding and reading her husband’s diary.
September 21, 2015 – Virginia Roberts Giuffre sues Ghislaine Maxwell for defamation after Maxwell called her a liar. (In 2021 Maxwell is found guilty and sentenced to 20 years.)
2016 - Melania needed a “cooling off period” after hearing, via media reports, of the president’s various scandals – including Stormy Daniels, the “Access Hollywood” tape, and Playboy Playmate Karen McDougal.
And, she allegedly leveraged the time apart to negotiate better prenup terms, particularly as related to her son Barron and ensuring his financial legacy as part of the “Trump empire.”
May 2017 – Maxwell settles Giuffre’s lawsuit, which Epstein had repeatedly avoided testifying.
May 25, 2018 - Joseph Recarey, lead detective on Epstein’s sex trafficking case in Palm Beach, Florida is found dead “after a brief illness.”
October 13, 2018 - Melania appears in public to showcase her $39 jackets that reads on the back, “I really don’t care, do you?” during a trip to a migrant CHILD detention center.
November 28, 2018 – The Miami Herald publishes a series of investigative reports into Epstein and Alex Acosta’s role in the plea deal.
December 4, 2018 – A week after the Miam Herald reports, Epstein reaches a settlement in a defamation case with attorney Bradley Edwards, who represented victims who were children at the time.
July 6, 2019 – Federal Agents arrest Epstein. He is charged with sex trafficking of minors and conspiracy to commit sex trafficking with minors.
July 9, 2019 – Trump begins to publicly distance himself from Jeffrey Epstein. Trump said in an interview, “I was “not a fan” of accused child sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein — but repeatedly refused to reveal what led to a “falling out” that he now claims to have had with the wealthy financier about 15 years ago.
Trump’s comments came a day after Epstein, 66, appeared in New York federal court to face new charges that he sexually abused dozens of underage girls, some as young as 14, in his Manhattan and Florida mansions from 2002 to 2005.
Trump told reporters that he had known Epstein “like everyone in Palm Beach,” Florida.
“He was a fixture in Palm Beach,” Trump said of Epstein, who is also known for having been friends with former President Bill Clinton.
“I had a falling out a long time ago with him,” Trump said. “I don’t think I’ve spoken to him in 15 years.”
“I was not a fan of his,” Trump said.
Reporters asked Trump at least four times what caused the falling out, in particular if it stemmed from a criminal probe of Epstein in Florida in the mid-2000. But aides ushered them out of the Oval Office as Trump did not answer.
During the same photo opportunity, Trump said that he felt badly for his Labor secretary, Alex Acosta, who is facing increasing calls by Democrats to resign because of his role in a non-prosecution agreement that Epstein signed in 2008 with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Miami, which Acosta headed at the time.
Trump said that Acosta has done an excellent job as Labor secretary, and said Acosta would not have been the only person responsible for the deal with Epstein.
At the time of that deal, Epstein was being investigated both by state and federal authorities for conduct that is now the basis for the new prosecution by federal prosecutors in Manhattan.
July 12, 2019 – Acosta resigns as labor secretary, citing the Epstein case.
August 10, 2019 – Epstein is found dead, “hanged” in his cell.
August 27, 2019 - U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman holds a hearing on a motion to dismiss the indictment against Epstein. In a remarkable move, he also says the court will hear "the testimony of victims here today" — an offer taken up by many women that day, under their own names or as "Jane Doe."
Courtney Wild, who had helped start the first proceedings against Epstein in Florida more than 10 years earlier, is among those who step forward.
"Jeffrey Epstein sexually abused me for years, robbing me of my innocence and mental health," she said. "Jeffrey Epstein has done nothing but manipulate our justice system, where he has never been held accountable for his actions, even to this day."
December 2019 – Virginia Roberts Giuffre posts on Twitter:
'F.B.I. will kill me to protect the ultra rich and well connected. I am making it publicy (sic) known that in no way, shape or form am I sucidal (sic). I have made this known to my therapist and GP. If something happens to me- in the sake of my family do not let this go away and help me to protect them. Too many evil people want to see me quiteted (sic),'
February 19, 2022 - Jean Luc Brunel, Epstein, Epstein and Trump associate, who owned “modeling agencies” that fed girls as young as 12 to the sex trafficking scheme, was found dead, HUNG in his jail cell.
August 23, 2022 - Steven Hoffenberg, fraudster and Jeffrey Epstein mentor, found dead at least 7 days after his actual death.
May 9, 2023 - A New York jury found Donald Trump guilty of sexually abusing E Jean Carroll in a New York department store changing room in 1996.
January 2024 - New York unseals 2010 deposition of Nadia Marcinoka (often referred to as Epstein’s Sex Slave). Nadia went missing just afterward.
MAY 30, 2024 - Jury Finds Donald Trump Guilty of 34 Counts
June 10, 2024 – Trump is asked if he would declassify and release the Epstein Files. Trump responds, Yeah, yeah, I would.” However, his full answer wasn't shown until it played on Will Cain's radio show.
Trump went on to say in the exchange with Campos-Duffy: "I don't know about Epstein so much as I do the others. Certainly about the way he died. It'd be interesting to find out what happened there, because that was a weird situation and the cameras didn't happen to be working, etc., etc. But yeah, I'd go a long way toward that one."
September 2024 – Trump pledges again to release the Epstein Files on Lex Fridman podcast.
March 13, 2025 - Trump’s spiritual advisor, Robert Morris (the lead pastor at Gateway Megachurch in Texas, steps down amid indictments of sexual abuse of children spanning back to the 1980s.
April 25, 2025 – Virginia Roberts Giuffre found dead in Australia.
July 7, 2025 – Trump: “Are you still talking about Jeffrey Epstein?”
July 16, 2025 - Maurene Comey, Prosecutor of Epstein’s case at Manhattan US Attorney’s Office, and former FBI Director James Comey’s daughter, is FIRED without given any reason.
July 21, 2025 - Roy Black, Epstein’s defense attorney who secured the 2008 plea deal, died of “an illness.”
July 22, 2025 – Epstein’s brother Mark tells CNN that his brother was “very close” with Donald Trump in the 1990s.
July 23, 2025 – White House communications director Steven Cheung said on CNN that Trump kicked Epstein out of Mar-a-Lago for “being a creep.”
July 28, 2025 - Trump told reporters at his golf property in Turnberry, Scotland, the reason for the rift was that Epstein “stole” young women who worked for his Mar-a-Lago spa in Palm Beach.
Trump didn’t specify a timeline for when it happened, but called it “such old history.” He said, “For years I wouldn’t talk to Jeffrey Epstein.”
“He stole people that worked for me. I said, ‘Don’t ever do that again.’ He did it again, and I threw him out of the place, persona non grata,” Trump said.
July 29, 2025 - Trump elaborated on his remarks from the day before, acknowledging that Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre was among spa staffers he said Epstein had poached from him.
“I think (Giuffre) worked at the spa,” Trump said aboard Air Force One. “He stole her.”
In 2009, under the pseudonym “Jane Doe 102,” Virginia Roberts Giuffre said Epstein’s convicted former girlfriend and accomplice, Ghislaine Maxwell, recruited her while she was a minor working at Mar-a-Lago to be the late sex offender’s masseuse. Giuffre’s family responded to Trump’s July 29 comments, saying his latest account raises questions about the president’s prior knowledge of Epstein’s criminal wrongdoing.
Giuffre spoke publicly in 2011 about her abuse, Axios reported.
Social Security records submitted to the court during Giuffre’s defamation case against Maxwell show that Giuffre was a locker room spa attendant at Mar-a-Lago in summer 2000, two years before Trump called Epstein a “terrific guy.” The precise dates and duration of her employment at Mar-a-Lago remained unclear when the lawsuit settled in 2017, ABC News reported.
When PolitiFact asked the White House for clarification about when and why Trump banned Epstein from Mar-a-Lago, Cheung said in an email, “taking employees is most definitely creepy.”
August 5, 2025 – House Oversight Committee subpoenas the Justice Department for Epstein Files.
August 6, 2025 – GLORIA ALLRED, representing Epstein Victims, ENTERS THE CHAT.
-- Girl Du Jour:



How, exactly, do people think this all ends? What’s the actual off-ramp here?
Take, for example, Pete Hegseth and Marco Rubio, along with the layers of officials underneath them in the State Department and military chain of command obeying their orders. Assuming a future where political control flips, whether through elections or the eventual collapse of leadership, what will they do at that moment?
The underlying premise I assume a lot of Americans casually accept is that power will just transfer cleanly, and that’s that. But if we’re talking about individuals facing serious legal exposure, i.e., criminal investigations, potential indictments, charges of treason, and even the possibility of being expelled to The Hague for war crimes and crimes against humanity, then we’re no longer in the realm of polite and peaceful transitions of power. Instead, we’re talking about individuals facing severe personal risk, reputational and financial ruin, and potential prison time or worse.
So, do these individuals in that position, essentially backed into a corner, just step aside and trust the system to let them off the hook even though they are guilty as sin? Or no? And if so, do they try to negotiate protection or immunity? Do they leave public life entirely and try to stay out of reach of prosecutors, perhaps by fleeing the country? Or do they rely on personal loyalty within what remains of the regime in a myriad of agencies and institutions to shield them long enough that consequences never materialize, including through violence if necessary?
That’s also before getting to the assumption doing the most invisible work here: that a “flip” in political leadership actually means the system underneath it flips too. That the same agencies, departments, and enforcement bodies that may have been hollowed out, restructured, or simply packed top to bottom with Trump loyalists suddenly all just fall in line with new political leadership without hesitation or friction. That people whose positions, careers, or protection were tied directly to the previous criminal power structure just calmly accept replacement, new directives, or the inevitable criminal and civil investigations into their own conduct.
None of that will be automatic. It requires compliance across entire chains of command. It also assumes that orders from new political leadership are actually carried out, not ignored, slow-walked, reinterpreted, or undermined from within. It assumes that institutional loyalty to the Constitution or the law outweighs personal loyalty, fear, or self-preservation across thousands of decision points.
If that assumption doesn’t hold, if even parts of the current fascist machinery resist, stall, or even fracture, then the idea of a clean transition starts to look less like a given and more like a best-case scenario Americans are hoping for rather than something just guaranteed to happen.
I can’t help but conclude that the speed of Project 2025 was for this point precisely. The architects of all of this weren’t just aiming for quick policy wins; they were moving fast to gut and repopulate the administrative state, along with key layers of law enforcement and the military chain of command, before any meaningful resistance could organize, and in preparation for a flip in political leadership they know will happen that they can then just sideline and ignore.
Elections can come and go. But if the underlying machinery is staffed end to end with loyalists, then a formal transfer of political power doesn’t necessarily translate into real governmental control. New political leadership can issue orders all day long, and it won’t matter if the people responsible for actually carrying them out decide to just flat-out refuse.
If control over key institutions by this regime outlasts control over elected office, then the idea that elections alone will reset the system looks to be a lot more fragile than Americans want to admit, and I’m not sure if they are quite ready to confront what that means.
 

Friday, April 10, 2026

 Murderous Corruption or Calculated Survival?
White Rose
April 10, 2026
The corruption cases against Benjamin Netanyahu are not abstract allegations. They are specific, documented, and ongoing. Bribery, fraud, breach of trust. Case 1000 with the cigars and champagne. Case 2000 with attempted media manipulation. Case 4000 with regulatory favors tied to telecom coverage. None of it proven in court. All of it serious enough to keep a sitting prime minister under criminal trial while still in power.
On their own, these cases would be a domestic political crisis. Significant, but contained. Leaders fall over less. Careers end quietly under this kind of pressure.
Then history breaks in.
The October 7 Hamas attack shatters the political landscape. War follows. Not a limited exchange, but a prolonged and devastating campaign with enormous civilian cost. The scale changes everything. The stakes change everything. And the context around Netanyahu’s legal jeopardy changes with it.
The argument shifts.
Critics are no longer talking about cigars and favors. They are asking whether the same instincts that allowed those smaller forms of corruption also shaped decisions on a much larger stage. Whether political survival began to overlap with national strategy. Whether a leader fighting for his freedom in court might also benefit from a nation locked in conflict.
That argument gains force when you look backward.
For years, Qatar transferred funds into Gaza in arrangements that critics describe as occurring with Israeli acquiescence. The stated rationale from Israeli officials was pragmatic. Keep Hamas contained. Maintain a fragile balance. Avoid strengthening the Palestinian Authority. It was framed as management, not endorsement.
Then Netanyahu’s own words cut through the ambiguity.
As he said in a 2019 Likud faction meeting, “Anyone who wants to thwart the establishment of a Palestinian state has to support bolstering Hamas and transferring money to Hamas… This is part of our strategy.”
That line matters because it removes the illusion of accident. Hamas was not only an enemy. At times, it was also treated as a counterweight within a broader political framework.
That does not prove conspiracy. It does not prove intent to cause harm. What it does is change how failure is interpreted.
If a strategy involves tolerating or indirectly strengthening a hostile force, then the failure to prevent the October 7 attack looks different to critics. Not just as a breakdown, but as the collapse of a calculated risk. A risk that, when it failed, produced catastrophic consequences.
From there, the accusation sharpens.
Not that Netanyahu ordered violence. Not that he sought mass death. But that the political framework he helped construct increased the likelihood of those outcomes, and once war began, created conditions where ending it quickly may not align with his personal or political incentives.
At the same time, the legal clock never stopped ticking.
The trial moved forward in uneven bursts. Delayed, but never gone. In November 2025, Netanyahu formally requested a presidential pardon. Members of his coalition explored legislative paths that could weaken or even eliminate key elements of the charges against him, including efforts aimed at the fraud counts. The courtroom, the parliament, and the battlefield began to blur into a single arena.
This is what critics mean when they say the system is bending.
Not in one dramatic act. Not in a single provable decision. In the overlap. Legal pressure. Political necessity. Wartime authority. Each reinforcing the other. Each narrowing the distance between personal survival and national policy.
Supporters reject this outright. They point to real and ongoing threats from Hamas, Hezbollah, and Iran. They argue that decisions are driven by security, not self-preservation. They see the “murderous corruption” label as a moral shortcut, a way to turn war into a personal indictment.
Both views exist.
What cannot be ignored is the structure of the moment. A leader under indictment. A nation at war. A strategy that, by his own admission, once treated its enemy as a tool. A legal process that continues in the background while political power fights to reshape it.
That does not prove murderous corruption.
It explains why the accusation refuses to go away.


 

The denials "she" exists are like everything Israel claims when it no longer serves their purposes.  Yet this picture was first shown back in the early 2000s when the rest of the world became aware she existed. She's doing her radio show here, but as in most cases with the Zionists, she became too controversial, and the denials began like they always do when something or someone no longer serves the purposes of Zionism, and that is to deny the existence or to claim what once was truth is no longer truth, and is now made up, or misleading. Propaganda isn't new neither is denial of the truth. She was Israels Rush Limbaugh, and was every bit as garrulous, and irksome as he was. 
 

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Translation below:

Nuremberg Code (1948)
1. The voluntary consent of the human subject is absolutely essential.
2. The experiment should be such as to yield fruitful results for the good of society, unprocurable by other methods or means of study, and not random and unnecessary in nature.
3. The experiment should be so designed and based on the results of animal experimentation and knowledge of the natural history of the disease or other problem under study that the anticipated results will justify the performance of the experiment.
4. The experiment should be so conducted as to avoid all unnecessary physical and mental suffering and injury.
5. No experiment should be conducted where there is an a priori reason to believe that death or disability injury will occur, except, perhaps, in those experiments where the experimental physicians also serve as subjects.
6. The degree of risk to be taken should never exceed that determined by the humanitarian importance of the problem to be solved by the experiment.
7. Proper preparations should be made and adequate facilities provided to protect the experimental subject against even remote possibilities of injury, disability, or death.
8. The experiment should be conducted only by scientifically qualified persons.
9. During the course of the experiment the human subject should be at liberty to bring the experiment to an end if he has reached the physical or mental state where continuation of the experiment seems to him to be impossible.
10. During the course of the experiment the scientist in charge must be prepared to terminate the experiment at any stage, if he has probable cause to believe that a continuation of the experiment is likely to result in injury, disability, or death to the experimental subject.