The Ugly Truth Trump Fears: He Helped Epstein Round Up the Girls
It’s time to drop the euphemisms, stop hedging, and say what
more and more Americans are beginning to suspect. Donald J. Trump wasn’t just a bystander to
Jeffrey Epstein’s empire of abuse. He was a recruiter, an enabler, and a
partner.
Let’s stop pretending otherwise.
Epstein wasn’t “stealing” young girls off the street like
some shadowy figure in a spy novel. He wasn’t breaking into homes and
kidnapping teenagers. He was buying them. And people like Trump were
helping him shop.
The truth is hiding in plain sight, not in redacted court
filings or sealed depositions but in Trump’s own behavior, words, and long,
sleazy friendship with Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell.
They partied together.
They laughed together.
They exchanged compliments.
And they shared an interest in "young" girls.
Trump once told New York Magazine that Epstein “likes
beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”
That wasn’t a warning. That was a brag, an open admission that he knew what Epstein
was doing and thought it was amusing, even admirable.
You don’t say that unless you’re in on the game.
You don’t wish Ghislaine Maxwell “well” from a White House
podium unless you’re terrified of what she might say.
You don’t block the release of Epstein’s records unless your
name is all over them, not just in
the contact list, but in the transactions.
It’s increasingly apparent: Trump was more than a fellow
guest. He was a collaborator. He was the bait man, the talent scout,
the smooth-talking celebrity who could impress vulnerable teenage girls and
usher them into the velvet-lined trap. Epstein may have built the system, but
men like Trump kept it running.
They used fame as a weapon.
They used power as an aphrodisiac.
They used money to silence and destroy.
This is not about guilt by association. It’s guilt by association.
It’s about years of shared behavior, aligned interests, and parallel
predation.
Trump wasn’t protecting his reputation when he fought to
suppress Epstein-related documents. He was defending himself, the serial
adulterer, the sexual predator, the pussy-grabber-in-chief
who, as it turns out, might also be a trafficker of underage girls.
It’s not a leap. It’s a natural conclusion from everything
we already know.
Look at the pattern:
- He
cheated on every wife he ever had.
- He
walked in on naked underage girls at beauty pageants he owned.
- He’s
been accused of sexual misconduct by over two dozen women.
- He
bragged, on tape, about doing “whatever you want” to women when you’re
rich.
What part of this man suggests restraint? Morality?
Innocence?
He didn’t just cross the line. He built a luxury golf course
on the other side.
And yet, here he is again, running for president, grinning
in defiance, screaming “witch hunt” while he drags a filthy, rotten past behind
him like a severed anchor.
This isn’t just about corruption. It’s about predation at
the highest level of power and a nation that continues to ignore it out of
political convenience, fear, or fatigue.
But that time is over.
We can’t let this become just another scandal in a
never-ending list. We’re talking about the organized abuse of girls, not
years ago, but recently, and potentially ongoing, covered up by the very man
who claimed to “protect” America’s values.
If Ghislaine Maxwell talks, really talks, and if the sealed files are ever made public, Donald
Trump’s legacy will not be Mar-a-Lago, red hats, or gold elevators. It will be
the horror of what he enabled, encouraged, and helped orchestrate.
He didn’t merely "know" Epstein.
He worked for him.
He helped build the machine.
And now he’s doing everything he can to keep it from being
dismantled, before it takes him with it.
William James Spriggs
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