Disaster Jeffery Epstein has comitted suicide - Matt Groening got him

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Convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein is dead, law enforcement sources said Saturday.

A gurney carrying a man who looked like Epstein was wheeled out of the Manhattan Correctional Center around 7:30 a.m. The ambulance went to New York Downtown Hospital.
 
Just saw on CBS this morning that he was heard "yelling screaming and shrieking." before he committed suicide. You know like how all suicidal people act, by trying to get as much attention brought upon themselves as possible.

How long before Barr comes out and says the cameras were broke?
 
Just saw on CBS this morning that he was heard "yelling screaming and shrieking." before he committed suicide. You know like how all suicidal people act, by trying to get as much attention brought upon themselves as possible.

How long before Barr comes out and says the cameras were broke?
That's all fine and dandy, but why didn't anyone go and check on him?
https://www.cbsnews.com/news/jeffre...ing-he-died-metropolitan-correctional-center/

The news is one sentence, the rest is just recap.
 
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Like I said, no one has the power to contest search warrants for his property anymore. They can just raid whatever they want now.
If this has already been said, my apologies. Is it possible Epstein was allowed to "suicide" himself for this very reason? To expedite matters before the really big fish involved in this could make sure evidence "dissapears"?
 
Either
1: it's not uncommon for prisoners to make a lot of noise and if the guards were really as overworked as people saying they are then they probably thought it was just a inmate starting shit.

Or

2: they were told to ignore it if they want to live
Dude in protective custody in solitary on suicide watch starts screaming bloody murder. "Oh it's probably nothing"

I'd go with number 2 being FAR more likely.
 
"Rusty Shackleford" has some drone footage of the FBI on the island yesterday.


Towards the end, the cops cover up the window so the drone can't film them.

edit: part 2
 
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Leave it to Donald Trump to take the fun out of even conspiracy theories.

The life and death of Jeffrey Epstein was filled with enough lurid intrigue to stock a library full of John Grisham–style thrillers. By the available evidence, Epstein was both a child molester and a procurer who provided wealthy associates with the opportunity to rape minors. He was an erstwhile associate of many powerful and famous men, including Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, and Prince Andrew of the United Kingdom. He had murky ties with intelligence and law enforcement agencies, which might have been a factor in the ridiculously lenient agreement he was offered in 2008 by then–US Attorney Alexander Acosta, who later had his position as secretary of labor torpedoed by revelations about the Epstein sweetheart deal. Finally, Epstein was, by Saturday morning, a dead man, a prisoner who apparently killed himself while in the custody of New York’s Metropolitan Correctional Center, a mysterious denouement to a sordid life that raised even more questions.

Given Epstein’s crimes and the still cloudy facts of his death, the immediate outpouring of conspiracy theories on social media was predictable. To this widespread speculation, Trump added his particular stamp, by elevating a tweet that accused Bill and Hillary Clinton of killing Epstein. The tweet contained the hashtags #ClintonBodyCount and #ClintonCrimeFamily, both of which encapsulate demented far-right theories that the Clintons are personally responsible for orchestrating countless murders. This fever-swamp fantasia now has the presidential stamp of approval.

Trump has done us all a favor by once again spewing forth from his bottomless reservoir of spite, cruelty, and mendacity. By so efficiently showing how unmoored speculations can only serve the agenda of moving discussion away from evidence and rationality into the realm of partisan malice and smears, Trump reminds us why we should eschew conspiracy theories. This is true even when, as in the Epstein case, conspiracy theories are hard to resist.

The opposite of conspiracy theories is investigation, whether carried out by journalists, law enforcement, or Congress. If conspiracy theories are an intellectual fog, properly conducted investigations return us to the clarity of daylight. Even with Epstein dead and the criminal case against him effectively over, there is still plenty to investigate.


Congressional Democrats can take a leading role in these investigations, although it’s unclear whether they have the political fortitude to do so.

Epstein’s death demands answers. According to The New York Times, “Epstein was supposed to have been checked by the two guards in the protective housing unit every 30 minutes, but that procedure was not followed that night [of the apparent suicide], a law-enforcement official with knowledge of his detention said.” Epstein’s last days under incarceration are filled with riddles. Did he make an earlier suicide attempt? We don’t know: Epstein claimed he was attacked, and the prison has made no final determination whether his earlier near-death experience was a suicide attempt or an attack. In either case, Epstein should have been under closer watch than he was.

The Associated Press reports that Metropolitan Correctional Center was understaffed and that guards had been working overtime in the days before Epstein was found dead. We need an investigation into whether the apparent suicide was caused by poor staffing or by other factors.

House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler and Oversight and Reform Chairman Elijah Cummings have both called for FBI and attorney general investigations into the circumstances of Epstein’s death. But neither prominent Democrat has promised congressional investigations. They should do so immediately.

Congress should also push ahead to investigate the deal Alexander Acosta made. Before Acosta’s resignation, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi resisted moves to impeach Acosta even as she called for his resignation. It’s time for Congress to revisit the 2008 deal Acosta made with Epstein, including whether Epstein got off easy because he was an informant for either intelligence agencies or federal law enforcement.



Yet, even by Trumpian standards, the claims the president is making are bizarre. After all, Epstein was killed in a federal institution under Trump’s authority. Is Trump suggesting that he’s too incompetent or weak to stop the Clinton murder machine? This goes against the fantasy of a wily and omni-competent Trump promoted by his most glint-eyed supporters, the proponents of the QAnon conspiracy theory.
 
I don't think this is that crazy, after all its no Hubbard tier space cultism

On a separate note, I posted this in the other epstein thread some time ago, epstein was on the advisory board of this site but has since been scrubbed off, there is reason to believe that these super bunkers
bunkers.jpg
are what is under the infamous temple
 
I don't think this is that crazy, after all its no Hubbard tier space cultism

On a separate note, I posted this in the other epstein thread some time ago, epstein was on the advisory board of this site but has since been scrubbed off, there is reason to believe that these super bunkers
bunkers.jpg
are what is under the infamous temple

The amazon link is far more informative that that Milquetoast description:


Donald Barr's Space Relations is a character-driven space opera from 1975. Despite the seemingly-humorous subtitle, it is a deadly earnest novel that attempts to tackle weighty issues with ostentatiously "literary" prose.

It tells the story of John Craig, the ambassador from Earth to the planet Kossar. Craig represents an intergalactic human empire, currently at war with a sinister bug people. Kossar, although human, is not part of the empire - mostly because the ruling aristocrats refuse to abolish the slave trade that is the foundation of their class system and economy.

The narrative is split in two. Initially (and ultimately) it tells the story of Craig's official visit to Kossar. In between, it recounts Craig's previous visit to the planet - two years spent as a slave of the fulsome Lady Morgan.

The war with the bug aliens is, although occasionally referenced, merely a MacGuffin to make Kossar (otherwise a backwater world in dire need of sterilization) important. Similarly, the complex, Machiavellian politics of the future - both in Kossar and on Earth - are often, tantalizingly, cited, but never fully explored.

Instead, the plot focuses on the torrid romance between John Craig (slave) and Lady Morgan (his owner). The author also explores (crashes through the underbrush, really) the issues of slavery and domination.

The result is a frustrating and ponderous read. Barr aggressively pursues character development instead of world-building, but since his characters neither grow nor change, it is merely a prolonged sketch of two fairly obnoxious people.

His exploration of slavery is neither sensitive nor telling. Despite repeatedly and officiously informing the reader that slavery is wrong at every turn (go figure), Barr creates two openly "superior" characters as his leads. Craig and Morgan freely kill, torture, seduce and make sweeping political decisions on behalf of thousands of people - but this is acceptable, because they're somehow imbued with "natural heroism". Slavery and oppression are wrong, unless you're someone as wise and talented as Craig or Morgan, in which you're perfectly justified in forcing decisions on other people.

An expression of this natural superiority is Craig's unbelievably irritating habit of composing poetry. Clearly intended to add to the depth of the novel, what begins as an annoying, occasional snippet soon becomes a field of lyrical land-mines. This practice is especially painful in the middle of the book, as the reader is forced to plow through sonnets on every other page. As a result, Space Relations is one of the most picture-perfect expressions of Tolkien's Law ("Always skip the poetry") that I've ever read.

Space Relations is a laborious read. Although I always appreciate an attempt at character-building instead of world-building, the novel managed to avoid everything of possible merit.”


Pulled from the amazon reviews.
A naturally superior class of people... doing whatever it is they want.
 
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