From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.trump,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: NBC Host Asks Epstein Victims For "Dirt" On Trump...
Date: Mon, 8 Sep 2025 08:09:35 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.
... she's left in stunned silence with their responses.
"I do have to ask, and I know and it's just something that I think we're compelled to at this moment with the attention on
President Trump, with these questions around a pardon... did anybody see or hear of the president himself doing anything
inappropriate as it related to Jeffrey Epstein?"
"No."
https://video.twimg.com/amplify_video/1963261557481091072/vid/avc1/1920x1080/P0pSxC1eAjom_oEy.mp4
=====
NBC Asks Epstein Survivors for 'Dirt' on Trump - It Backfires Spectacularly
Six women who say they were trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein or his longtime associate Ghislaine Maxwell issued a unified plea Tuesday
for the federal government to release more investigative files and pressed President Donald Trump to rule out a pardon for Maxwell.
The panel also refused to back any unsupported claims of wrongdoing by Trump in terms of his relations with the late Jeffrey
Epstein or his victims.
Appearing in Washington, D.C., the women spoke with NBC News in a panel that also included relatives of Virginia Roberts Giuffre,
one of the most prominent Epstein accusers, who died by suicide in April.
"Epstein was a master manipulator," said Jess Michaels, who alleges Epstein raped her in 1991 when she was 22. "That was a strategy
that was honed. That was a strategy that no young woman, no teenage girl had a chance - not a chance against his psychopathic
skills."
Michaels said she came forward because of what she called a "severe miscarriage of justice" and a 'delay in accountability."
Other accusers included Wendy Avis, Marijke Chartouni, Jena-Lisa Jones, Lisa Phillips, and Liz Stein. All voiced support for making
Epstein-related files public, echoing calls from lawmakers in both parties. The comments came just hours before the Republican-led
House Oversight Committee released more than 33,000 pages of documents tied to Epstein.
Jones, who alleges Epstein first abused her when she was 14, said too many people in positions of power looked the other way.
"There were many, many adults around properties that may not have participated but very clearly knew what was going on," she said.
"And they're not saying anything, and why are they still not saying anything and speaking up on our behalf?"
Avis, also 14 at the time she says Epstein abused her, said she had never spoken publicly before but wanted to join the push. "Not
everybody is getting justice, and that's not right," she said. "The everyday person is out there, and that's me, and we're
victims."
Stein added that the Justice Department has failed to keep survivors informed.
"We haven't been protected, and we haven't been informed," she said.
Congressional interest in Epstein's case has intensified since lawmakers returned from August recess. House Oversight Chairman
James Comer (R-KY) has sought to depose Maxwell, pending a Supreme Court decision on whether to review her 2021 conviction. The
House GOP also introduced legislation Tuesday directing further investigation into what it called "possible mismanagement" of
federal probes into Epstein and Maxwell.
Separately, Reps. Ro Khanna (D-CA) and Thomas Massie (R-KY) held a press conference Wednesday with accusers to demand immediate
release of the Justice Department's Epstein files. They are leading a discharge petition that could force a House vote if it
garners enough support.
Trump initially voiced support for releasing all documents but has recently diverged from some members of his party who have
circulated conspiracy theories about Epstein's death and alleged client lists.
Epstein died by suicide in 2019 at age 66 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges. A Justice Department review later found
widespread failures at the jail but reaffirmed the official conclusion of 'suicide.'
Maxwell, 63, is serving a 20-year sentence for recruiting and trafficking minors for Epstein. She is appealing the conviction. Last
month, transcripts were released from a two-day Justice Department interview in which she denied wrongdoing, denied the existence
of a client list, and insisted she never saw inappropriate conduct by anyone, including Trump. Days later, she was transferred from
a Florida facility to a minimum-security prison camp in Texas, a move that drew criticism from federal prison staff.
Phillips, who says Epstein groomed and assaulted her after she traveled to his island in the late 1990s, said if officials fail to
act, survivors will continue pressing on their own.
"We've been compiling lists of our own," she said. "Please come forward, and we'll compile our own list and seek justice on our
own."
===============================================================================
"Trump Derangement Syndrome" Is a Real Mental Condition
All you need to know about "Trump Derangement Syndrome," or TDS.
"Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS) is a mental condition in which a person has been driven effectively insane due to their dislike
of Donald Trump, to the point at which they will abandon all logic and reason."
Justin Raimondo, the editorial director of Antiwar.com, wrote a piece in the Los Angeles Times in 2016 that broke TDS down into
three distinct phases or stages:
"In the first stage of the disease, victims lose all sense of proportion. The president-elect's every tweet provokes a firestorm,
as if 140 characters were all it took to change the world."
"The mid-level stages of TDS have a profound effect on the victim's vocabulary: Sufferers speak a distinctive language consisting
solely of hyperbole."
"As TDS progresses, the afflicted lose the ability to distinguish fantasy from reality."
The Point here is simple: TDS is, in the eyes of its adherents, the knee-jerk opposition from liberals to anything and everything
Trump does. If Trump announced he was donating every dollar he's ever made, TDS sufferers would suggest he was up to something
nefarious, according to the logic of TDS. There's nothing - not. one. thing. - that Trump could do or say that would be received
positively by TDSers.
The history of Trump Derangement Syndrome actually goes back to the early 2000s - a time when the idea of Trump as president was a
punch line for late-night comics and nothing more.
Wikipedia traces its roots to "Bush Derangement Syndrome" - a term first coined by the late conservative columnist Charles
Krauthammer back in 2003. The condition, as Krauthammer defined it, was "the acute onset of paranoia in otherwise normal people in
reaction to the policies, the presidency - nay - the very existence of George W. Bush."