Epstein Depravity Ignored exposes Jeffrey Epstein’s child exploitation network, with Ghislaine Maxwell invoking the Fifth Amendment amid damning released files. DOJ officials Pam Bondi and Kash Patel, along with the president, face scrutiny over inaction despite evidence implicating powerful figures in eugenicist schemes. The speaker warns of systemic desensitization to atrocities, calling perpetrators "Malthusian Bentham-esque monsters," and frames this as humanity’s most urgent crisis—demanding audience collaboration to force accountability before the "show" ends. [Automatically generated summary]
Well, from the confines of the WABC Studios, it is right now 12.35 a.m. on what appears to be a Tuesday morning.
I'm here in, can you see the city behind me?
I'm about to go on from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m.
And I wanted to just run something by you, which is, I think maybe one of the themes of what I'm going to be doing tonight, and it's kind of generic.
But perhaps maybe you can help me hone the issue down.
And that is simply this.
Our war against evil.
Now, for the longest time, I always kind of fought against that.
I thought fighting against evil was something that was a little bit, it was a little too obvious to me.
Yes, evil was horrible.
Evil was obvious.
But when I see what is going on, what we are learning every single day from Epstein in particular, and with Ghelane Maxwell taking the fifth and other things as well, it makes me realize that, my friends, we have a full court press that we must bring about right now.
More important than anything, more important than Super Bowls or politics or even missing women.
I hate to say this.
I feel very sorry for Nancy Guthrie.
But we have something right now which is so frightening and so scary.
And it is the habituation of us to evil.
We are learning right now, and I can't say things.
This is the best part about YouTube, but you know what I'm talking about.
Things involving horrors to children that I cannot even put into words.
I can't put into words as to how horrible it is.
And what we're doing every single day is we're becoming habituated and conditioned to it.
And that's what scares me.
Every time we hear another story about another island, another person, another individual who was involved in this horror show, we become more and more used to it.
We say, okay, all right, okay.
And that's what scares me.
What happens next?
Who is speaking out on this?
Where is our government?
Where is DOJ, Pam Bondi, Kash Patel, even the president to an extent?
Where are they?
How long are we going to put up with this before we say, all right, that's enough?
Now, I'm not necessarily saying heads are going to roll because I don't believe, frankly, that anybody's going to be prosecuted.
I really don't.
I don't think anybody's going to be prosecuted.
I don't think anybody's going to...
Not that they shouldn't be.
Not that they shouldn't be, but I don't think they are.
I don't think it's going to happen.
Sad to say.
But who speaks up?
Where is the outrage?
Where is our collective outrage?
I've done it.
You've done it.
Sometimes we get involved in issues that are kind of easier, a little lower hanging fruit, things that aren't necessarily that complicated.
And I ask myself the question, how is it, how is it that we are supposedly able to handle something of this particular level without losing our minds?
Without losing our minds and really understanding how important this is.
Look, what I'm going to do is right now, I'm going to try to devote more of my attention to this.
I think you and I should be talking about this more often.
I think you and I should be, I think, perhaps looking at more of the issues a little bit better.
We need to focus more on this.
What is happening with Epstein?
Where are we going to go next with this?
What is happening to children, it goes without saying, is beyond horrid, beyond horrid, beyond anything I could even imagine.
And I can't tell you what's happening.
Everything that we thought before, that we feared about, everything, all of these horror stories, these individuals, these eugenicists, these Malthusian Bentham-esque monsters who wanted to play with our children, basically play with our future, all of them.
It makes me think to myself, how is it?
How is it that we have just sat back and allowed this to go on?
Where is, I mean, we've released files, that's good.
What's happening next?
Again, I don't think there's going to be prosecutions.
It's going to be very difficult to prove these things.
I hate to say this.
It's going to be very difficult to prove because no matter who it is, no matter, especially somebody who's high and mighty and powerful, if you bring them up, it's going to be difficult to, how do I say this?
Let me turn this around here.
Oop, hang on, you don't need that.
There we go.
It's going to be very difficult for us to, oops, there we go.
I haven't done this in a while.
Difficult Proofs00:01:13
Forgive me, my friends.
Forgive me.
I have unlocked my phone.
In any event, I'm going to be talking more about this.
I have got to figure out a way, and we've got to figure out a way, to put Epstein, not Epstein, but what is going on now front and center.
That's the part.
Nothing else.
Think about it.
What matters more than that?
What issue matters more than what has happened to children, but what's going on right now?
These ruthless, ruthless individuals from a world, from a planet, from an era that I never thought even possible.
In any event, dear friends, that's it.
That's all I wanted to say.
Thank you for your time.
Thank you for your patience.
Let me know.
Comment.
What do we do?
Give me some suggestions.
Where do we go next?
How do we turn the heat up on this?
This is the most critical issue there is.
And until we meet again, my friends, don't forget, by the way, tune in at WABC in about 20 minutes.
Join me.
And until then, my friend, remember, the monkey's dead.