By Chris Hedges
December 07,
202:
Information Clearing House
-- "Scheerpost.com"
--The trial of Ghislaine Maxwell which
began this week in Manhattan will not hold to
account the powerful and wealthy men who are also
complicit in the sexual assaults of girls as young
as twelve Maxwell allegedly procured for billionaire
Jeffrey Epstein.
Donald Trump, Bill Clinton, Bill Gates,
hedge-fund billionaire Glenn Dubin, former New
Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson, former Secretary of the
Treasury and former president of Harvard Larry
Summers, Stephen Pinker, Prince Andrew, Alan
Dershowitz, billionaire Victoria’s Secret CEO Les
Wexner, the J.P Morgan banker Jes Staley, former
Israeli prime minister Ehud Barack, real estate
mogul Mort Zuckerman, former Maine senator George
Mitchell, Harvey Weinstein and many others who were
at least present and most likely participated in
Epstein’s perpetual Bacchanalia, are not in court.
The law firms and high-priced attorneys, federal and
state prosecutors, private investigators, personal
assistants, publicists, servants, drivers and
numerous other procurers, sometimes women, who made
Epstein’s crimes possible are not being
investigated. Those in the media, the political
arena and the entertainment industry who
aggressively and often viciously shut down and
discredited the few voices, including those of a
handful of intrepid reporters, who sought to shine a
light on the crimes committed by Epstein and his
circle of accomplices are not on trial. The videos
that Epstein apparently collected of his guests
engaged in their sexual escapades with teenage and
underage girls from the cameras he had installed in
his opulent residences and on his private island
have mysteriously disappeared, most probably into
the black hole of the FBI, along with other crucial
evidence. Epstein’s death in a New York jail cell,
while officially ruled a suicide, is in the eyes of
many credible investigators a murder. With Epstein
dead, and Maxwell sacrificed, the ruling oligarchs
will once again escape justice.
The Epstein case is
important because, however much is being covered up,
it is a window into the scourge of male violence
that explodes in decayed cultures, fueled by
widening income disparities, the collapse of the
social contract and the grotesque entitlement that
comes with celebrity, political power, and wealth.
When a ruling elite perverts all institutions,
including the courts, into instruments that serve
the exclusive interests of the entitled, when it
willfully neglects and abandons larger and larger
segments of the population, girls and women always
suffer disproportionally. The struggle for equal
pay, equal distribution of wealth and resources,
access to welfare, legal aid that offers adequate
protection under the law, social services, job
training, healthcare, and education services, have
been so degraded they barely exist for the poor,
especially poor girls and women.
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Women, traditionally burdened with the care of
children, the elderly and the sick, stripped of
control over their own bodies in states that seek to
deny reproductive rights, are cornered, unable to
make a living and secure legal protection. This is
always the goal of patriarchy. And in this degraded
world girls and women are easy prey for pimps,
pedophiles, and rapists such as Epstein and his
accomplices. These men look at their victims not as
children or young women in distress but as human
trash, no more worthy of consideration than a slave,
which in fact many of these girls and women become.
A licentious, money-drenched, morally bankrupt
and intellectually vacuous ruling class, accountable
to no one and free to plunder and prey on the weak
like human vultures, rise to power in societies in
terminal decline. This class of parasites was
savagely parodied in the first-century satirical
novel “Satyricon” by Gaius Petronius, written during
the reign of Nero. Epstein and his cohorts for years
engaged in sexual perversions of Petronian
proportions, as Miami Herald investigative reporter
Julie Brown, whose dogged reporting was largely
responsible for reopening the federal investigation
in Epstein and Maxwell, documents in her book
“Perversion of Justice: The Jeffrey Epstein Story.”
As Brown writes, in 2016 an anonymous woman,
using the pseudonym “Kate Johnson,” filed a civil
complaint in federal court in California alleging
she was raped by Trump and Epstein when she was
thirteen over a four-month period from June to
September 1994. “I loudly pleaded with Trump to
stop,” she said in the lawsuit about being raped by
Trump. “Trump responded to my pleas by violently
striking me in the face with his open hand and
screaming that he could do whatever he wanted.”
Brown writes:
Johnson said that Epstein invited her to a
series of “underage sex parties” at his New York
mansion where she met Trump. Enticed by promises
of money and modeling opportunities, Johnson
said she was forced to have sex with Trump
several times, including once with another girl,
twelve years old, whom she labeled “Marie Doe.”
Trump demanded oral sex, the lawsuit said,
and afterward he “pushed both minors away while
angrily berating them for the ‘poor’ quality of
the sexual performance,” according to the
lawsuit, filed April 26 in U.S. District Court
in Central California.
Afterward, when Epstein learned that Trump
had taken Johnson’s virginity, Epstein allegedly
“attempted to strike her about the head with his
closed fists,” angry he had not been the one to
take her virginity. Johnson claimed that both
men threatened to harm her, and her family if
she ever revealed what had happened.
The lawsuit states that Trump did not take part
in Epstein’s orgies but liked to watch, often while
the thirteen-year-old “Kate Johnson” gave him a hand
job. It appears Trump was able to quash the lawsuit
by buying her silence. She has since disappeared.
These mediocrities, drunk
with their own self-importance, equate celebrity,
power and wealth with wisdom. Petronius’ Trimalchio,
the archetypal self-made millionaire whose vulgarity
and stupidity make him one of great comic buffoons
of literature, was more than matched by Epstein who
organized pretentious dinners for those in his
secret billionaires club, which included Elon Musk,
Bill Gates, Salar Kamangar and Jeff Bezos. Epstein
and his guests, as in Petronius’s chapter “Dinner
with Trimalchio,” dreamed up bizarre schemes of
social engineering, including Epstein’s plan to seed
the human species with his own DNA by creating a
baby compound at his sprawling estate in New Mexico.
“Epstein was also obsessed with cryonics, the
transhumanist philosophy whose followers believe
that people can be replicated or brought back to
life after they are frozen,” Brown writes. “Epstein
apparently told some of the members of his
scientific circle that he wanted to inseminate women
with his sperm for them to give birth to his babies,
and that he wanted his head and his penis frozen.”
Epstein, who regularly entertained and funded the
work of Harvard faculty, was made a visiting fellow
in Harvard’s Department of Psychology, although he
had no academic qualifications that made him
eligible for the position. He was given a key card
and pass code, as well as an office, in the building
that housed Harvard’s Program for Evolutionary
Dynamics. He referred to himself in his press
releases as “Science Philanthropist Jeffrey
Epstein,” “Education activist Jeffrey Epstein,”
“Evolutionary Jeffrey Epstein,” “Science patron
Jeffrey Epstein” and “Maverick hedge funder Jeffrey
Epstein.”
The judicial system, for years, worked to protect
Epstein. The legal anomalies, including the
disappearance of massive amounts of evidence
incriminating Epstein, saw Epstein avoid federal
sex-trafficking charges in 2007 when his attorneys
negotiated a secret deal with Alex Acosta in the
U.S. attorney’s office in Miami to plead guilty to
lesser state charges of soliciting a minor for
prostitution.
The prominent men accused of also engaging in
Epstein’s carnival of pedophilia, including the
attorney and former Harvard law professor Alan
Dershowitz, brazenly lie and threaten anyone daring
to call them out. Dershowitz, for example, claims
that an investigation, which he has refused to make
public, by the former FBI director Louis Freeh
proves he had never had sex with one of Epstein’s
victims, Virginia Giuffre. He has sent repeated
threats to Brown and her editors at the Miami
Herald. Brown continues:
[Dershowitz] kept referring to information
that was contained in sealed documents. He
accused the newspaper of not reporting “facts”
that he said were in those sealed documents. The
truth is, I tried to explain, newspapers just
can’t write about things because Alan Dershowitz
says they exist. We need to see them. We need to
verify them. Then, because I said “show me the
material,” he publicly accused me of committing
a criminal act by asking him to produce
documents that were under court seal.
This is the way Dershowitz operates.
What disturbs me the most about Dershowitz is
the way that the media, with few exceptions,
fails to critically challenge him. Journalists
fact-checked Donald Trump and others in his
administration almost every day, yet, for the
most part, the media seems to give Dershowitz a
pass on the Epstein story.
In 2015, when Giuffre’s allegations first
became public, Dershowitz went on every
television program imaginable swearing, among
other things, that Epstein’s plane logs would
exonerate him. “How do you know that?” he was
asked.
He replied that he was never on Epstein’s
plane during the time that Virginia was involved
with Epstein.
But if the media had checked, they could have
learned that he was indeed a passenger on the
plane during that time period, according to the
logs.
Then he testified, in a sworn deposition,
that he never went on any plane trips without
his wife. But he was listed on those passage
manifests as traveling multiple times without
his wife. During at least one trip, he was on
the plane with a model named Tatiana.
The ability of the powerful
to ignore the law raises important and different
questions for girls and women about the role of
government, police and the law. Defunding the police
is not a solution. Demilitarizing the police is.
Women need legal protection and need police that
function as police, as a sanction with severe
consequences against male violence. They need social
support. They need robust institutions, including
the courts, which prevent them from being
blackmailed, bullied, and abused. To challenge
sexual violence, to challenge objectification, to
challenge the cultural hypersexualization of women,
is to be subject to vicious character assassination,
threatened, including the threat of rape, and at
times killed. To stand up to protect water, to
assist a truth-teller, if you are a woman, is to
face potential economic destitution. To stand up and
name your abuser, as many of the courageous women
who have come forward in the Epstein case have done,
is to have high-priced teams of attorneys and
private investigators pursue every avenue to
demonize, discredit and destroy you financially and
psychologically. The resources available to the
powerful, and the dearth of resources available to
the powerless, skews this fight in favor of the
predators. This is by design.
The struggle for liberation and justice by women
is central to the struggle for liberation and
justice for everyone. We will not resist the radical
evil before us without women, if we are denied
access to the ideas and leadership of women, and in
particular women of color. So, while we must decry
violence and exploitation against all of the
oppressed, we must also recognize that male violence
against women – including prostitution and its
promoter, pornography – is an especially insidious
form of violence. It is a tool of corporate
domination and capitalism. It is engrained
in the racism and exploitation of imperialism and
colonialism. But it also exists outside the
structures of capitalism, imperialism, and
colonialism.
More women have been killed by their domestic
partners since 2001 than all the Americans killed on
September 11, and in the wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan. Predatory male power infects the
left as well as the right, the anti-capitalists as
well as the capitalists, the anti-imperialists as
well as the imperialists and the anti-racists as
well as the racists. It is its own evil. And if it
is not defeated there will be no justice for women
or for anyone else.
The predators know that desperation forces girls
and women, with no alternatives left, to trade sex
for the most basic staples of life, including food
and shelter. In every conflict I covered as a war
correspondent there was an explosion of prostituted
girls and women. And as we are burdened with greater
and greater numbers of environmental migrants — over
a billion by 2050,
by one prediction — fleeing droughts, rising sea
levels, flooding, wildfires and declining crop
yields these exchanges of sex for the most basic
elements need to survive will become more common.
The scourge of male violence is growing, not
decreasing.
George Bernard Shaw got it right. Poverty is:
“[T]he worst of crimes. All the other crimes
are virtues beside it; all the other dishonors
are chivalry itself by comparison. Poverty
blights whole cities, spreads horrible
pestilences, strikes dead the very souls of all
who come within sight, sound, or smell of it.
What you call crime is nothing: a murder here
and a theft there, a blow now and a curse then.
What do they matter? They are only the accidents
and illnesses of life; there are not fifty
genuine professional criminals in London. But
there are millions of poor people, abject
people, dirty people, ill-fed, ill-clothed
people. They poison us morally and physically;
they kill the happiness of society; they force
us to do away with our own liberties and to
organize unnatural cruelties for fear they
should rise against us and drag us down into
their abyss. Only fools fear crime; we all fear
poverty.”
Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel said of society that
“some are guilty, but all are responsible.” The
crime of poverty is a communal crime. Our failure,
as the richest nation on earth, to provide safe and
healthy communities, ones where all children have
enough to eat and a future, is a communal crime. Our
failure to provide everyone, and especially the
poor, with a good education and housing is a
communal crime. Our failure to make health care a
human right, forcing parents, burdened with
astronomical medical bills, to bankrupt themselves
to save their sick sons or daughters, is a communal
crime. Our failure to provide meaningful work — in
short, the possibility of hope — is a communal
crime. Our decision to militarize police forces and
build prisons, rather than invest in people, is a
communal crime. Our failure to protect girls and
women is a communal crime. The misguided belief in
charity and philanthropy rather than justice is a
communal crime. “You Christians have a vested
interest in unjust structures which produce victims
to whom you then can pour out your hearts in
charity,” Karl Marx said, chastising a group of
church leaders.
If we do not work to eliminate the causes of
poverty, the greatest of all crimes, the
institutional structures that keep the poor poor,
then we are responsible. There are issues of
personal morality, and they are important, but they
mean nothing without a commitment to social
morality. Only those who have been there truly
understand. Only those with integrity and courage
speak the truth. And at the forefront of this fight
are women.
Sexual sadism is fed by the
entitlement of the powerful and a pornography
industry that eroticizes images of girls and women
being physically abused. It is not accidental that
many of the Abu Ghraib images resemble stills from
porn films. There is a shot of a naked man kneeling
in front of another man as if performing oral sex.
There is a photo of a naked man on a leash held by a
female American soldier. There are photos of naked
men in chains. There are photos of naked men stacked
one on top of the other in a pile on the floor. And
there are hundreds more classified photos that
purportedly show forced masturbation by Iraqi
prisoners and the rape of prisoners, including young
boys, by U.S. soldiers, many of whom were schooled
in these torture techniques in our vast system of
mass incarceration.
The list of suspected abusers around Epstein was
not segregated by the left or the right. It included
Republicans, like Trump, and Democrats such as
Clinton. It included philanthropists such as Gates,
the former prime minister of Israel, and Harvard
academics. It included celebrities, such as David
Copperfield, and the titans of finance and business.
The common denominator was not politics or ideology,
but that they were powerful and wealthy men.
The feminist Andrea Dworkin understood. She
excoriated the left, who railed against the excesses
of capitalism, while ignoring the capitalist
exploitation of girls and women. She wrote:
Capitalism is not wicked or cruel when the
commodity is the whore; profit is not wicked or
cruel when the alienated worker is a female
piece of meat; corporate bloodsucking is not
wicked or cruel when the corporations in
question, organized crime syndicates, sell cunt;
racism is not wicked or cruel when the black
cunt or yellow cunt or red cunt or Hispanic cunt
or Jewish cunt has her legs splayed for any
man’s pleasure; poverty is not wicked or cruel
when it is the poverty of dispossessed women who
have only themselves to sell; violence by the
powerful against the powerless is not wicked or
cruel when it is called sex; slavery is not
wicked or cruel when it is sexual slavery;
torture is not wicked or cruel when the
tormented are women, whores, cunts. The new
pornography is left-wing; and the new
pornography is a vast graveyard where the Left
has gone to die. The Left cannot have its whores
and its politics too.
The Earth, and all forms of life on this planet,
must be revered, and protected if we are to endure
as a species. This means inculcating a different
vision of human society. It means building a world
where domination and ceaseless exploitation, in all
its forms, are condemned, where empathy, especially
for the weak and for the vulnerable is held up as
the highest virtue. It means recovering the capacity
for awe and reverence for the sacred sources that
sustain life. It means that girls and women must be
empowered to control their own fates. Once we stand
up for this ethic of life, once we include all
people, including girls and women, as an integral
part of this ethic, we can build a successful
resistance movement that can challenge the radical
evil before us. But we can’t do it unless half of
the human population, girls and women, are at our
side. Their fight is our fight. Their justice is our
justice. Once they are free, we can all be free.
Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning
journalist who was a foreign correspondent for
fifteen years for The New York Times, where
he served as the Middle East Bureau Chief and
Balkan Bureau Chief for the paper. He previously
worked overseas for The Dallas Morning
News, The Christian Science
Monitor, and NPR. He is the host of the
Emmy Award-nominated RT America show On
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