I’m not imbedding the Kyle Kulinski YouTube video in this post that is linked and referenced in the footnotes. (1) The material is not only disturbing. But Kyle on his own show is addressing a younger audience including “bros” who don’t restrict themselves to safe-for-the-office language. But he’s a good reporter and makes it clear when he’s speculating and when he’s reporting on facts and credible allegations. (For those with long memories, this was also an issue during the McCarthy period in which people were often falsely accused of being Communists and/or committing espionage.)
It’s also worth remembering that raw files collected by law enforcement have to be treated with particular caution. Government files of allegations are not in themselves direct evidence. Law enforcement has to follow up on those stories to evaluate their credibility and develop supporting evidence to see if they are usable in legal proceedings. The things for which Jeffrey Epstein was convicted and imprisoned are bad enough to see that he was a disgrace of a human being.
But the network of wealthy and powerful people that Epstein built up that we know about from well-reported and -documented material, is really staggering. Kyle makes that point emphatically in this video.
If somebody had written this “Epstein story” up as a novel, readers would probably assume that it was an obsessive Marxist or anarchist who has a disturbing fixation on pornographic fantasies.
I don’t know if the very wealthy are more susceptible to perverse sexual practices than anyone else. But they do have more opportunities to indulge them and not wind up in jail.
Here is a report from Democracy Now! on the recent Epstein releases that I am embedding: (2)
That report also mentions the careless handling of the names of victims and witnesses by Trump officials in the recently redacted documents.
One last comment here: a number of commentators have used the term “Epstein class” to describe his very wealthy clients and supporters. I would prefer that commentators not use that particular term, but it could be understood to have antisemitic vibes, like “Rothchild” or “George Soros” are often used by rightwingers.
Fintan O’Toole wrote last July, speculating about why Trump finds the Epstein story such a sensitive point:
For Trump, the great problem of the Epstein story is that it is the point at which paranoid fantasy melds into grotesque reality. It is a hybrid of fevered conspiracy theory and actual conspiracy. It lives at once in a gothic horror movie he has helped to script and in the all-too-tangible world of untrammeled power and merciless exploitation he actually inhabits. It provokes both wild surmises and entirely rational questions. This is a combustible mix that Trump does not know how to control. (3) [my emphasis]O’Toole makes this comment about the symbolism of Jeffrey Epstein as a symbol for degenerate wealthy predators:
The undead Epstein continues to stalk the land partly because of the overlap of his true story with [the far-right conspiracist fantasy] QAnon’s wild imaginings and partly because his vampiric activities dramatize much larger realities. He embodies the monstrously exploitative operations of both patriarchy and social class. As with Dracula, the superrich overlord is the predator and the girls from working-class families are the prey. Many of Epstein’s victims lived in financially precarious households in West Palm Beach — as the Justice Department put it, they were “typically from single-mother households and difficult financial circumstances. ”The two or three hundred dollars they were each offered to perform massages on middle-aged men was a lot of money for these girls and their families. To cross the bridge into Palm Beach was to enter a different world of extravagant opulence. This is a tale of two Americas, and of the awful things one of them can do to the other.He adds that the scandalous image of Jeffrey Epstein “is the tangible substance that gives credibility to [the Trump cult’s] darkest visions of how the world works.” Trump’s current poll numbers indicate that his support is down to as low as level as it’s ever likely to go. In American society, there seems to be a solid base of one-quarter to one-third of the population who are distinctly attracted to the politics of authoritarianism.
Trump’s political genius lies in his ability to embody these same realities of male power and economic abuse while simultaneously presenting himself as the savior of those who suffer under them. But Epstein is his all too obviously evil twin. He reminds Trump’s base what an exploitative elite really looks like. His network of friends and enablers brings back to their minds Trump’s original political message of 2015 and 2016: the idea that the true divide is not between Republicans and Democrats but between parasitic elites and ordinary people. His proximity to Epstein threatens to drag Trump back onto the side of that line where he actually belongs. [my emphasis]
That authoritarian core is unlikely to be won over a direct rejection of Trump as their Great Leader. But Trump’s involvement with Epstein and his handling of the files make it harder for him to increase his support.
Notes:
(1) The Epstein Files Just Changed The World Forever-The Kyle Kulinski Show. Secular Talk YouTube channel 02/03/2026. <https://youtu.be/GZa938jzqc4?si=mrKyqAfg5wuUd0rU> (Accessed: 2026-03-02).
(2) “Billionaire Boys Club": What the Latest Epstein Files Reveal About Elite Impunity. Democracy Now! YouTube channel. <https://youtu.be/xA8eLHP7lsM?si=XfzZbelTn9-H8jF4> (Accessed: 2026-03-02).
(3) O’Toole, Fintan (2025): ‘A Guy Who Never Dies’. New York Review Online 08/12/2025. <https://www.nybooks.com/online/2025/08/12/a-guy-who-never-dies/> (Accessed: 2026-03-02).


