Mike Gross for Congress
The Epstein files will dominate headlines, fuel conspiracy theories, and drag more famous names through the mud. But let’s be honest - it probably won’t tell us anything we don’t already know about our leaders. It’ll just confirm it. The President told us everything we needed to know about his character over a decade ago. And he’s reinforced it time and time again. So why are we surprised this time? The Epstein files are just the latest example of our political rot Here’s the first truth: Every American deserves complete transparency from our government. Every victim deserves to be heard. And every pedophile, trafficker, and anyone complicit in their crimes should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law. No spin, no mercy, no selective redactions. No excuses about “protecting reputations.” Trust only exists when truth does. And until our leaders stop treating truth like a political liability, we’ll keep living in a system that protects predators instead of everyday Americans. And the second truth? The real scandal here isn’t going to be the files. It’s us. Because at some point, this stopped shocking us. The notion that powerful men use their influence to abuse and exploit? To prey on innocent victims? We’ve basically come to expect it. Presidents, senators, billionaires, judges - we’ve watched them fall, then rise again. And somewhere along the line that became acceptable. That’s the crisis. The crimes themselves are horrendous and inexcusable. But our national shrug in response is equally detestable. We tell ourselves “it’s just politics” or “the other side is involved too,” as if moral bankruptcy is a prerequisite for power. We excuse lies as strategy, corruption as leadership, and cruelty as strength. And when the next scandal breaks, it dominates the headlines, we act outraged for a week, then move on to the next circus. What are we doing? At some point, we have to ask: Where do we go from here? Do we keep trudging along, pretending it’s normal that our so-called public servants behave like untouchable feudal lords? Do we keep letting money, power, and fame erase accountability? Or do we finally draw a line and say enough? This isn’t about partisanship. It’s about the character of those entrusted with our nation’s ultimate responsibilities. The highest office in the land should still mean something sacred - something aspirational. If we lose that, then we lose the compass that guides us. And that’s exactly what’s happened. We’ve let greed, power, and narcissism replace decency, humility, and moral courage. This nobody would ensure that we prosecute any individual responsible for crimes against humanity. Their actions are inexcusable. And it’s time we hold them ALL accountable. We can’t defend the indefensible When these files drop, expect outrage. Expect headlines. Expect politicians pretending to be disgusted when they’re really just calculating how to spin it. But when the smoke clears, the real question won’t be about Epstein or his enablers - it’ll be about us. Because what this truly exposes is the national rot we’ve come to tolerate. We’ve normalized corruption, fetishized celebrity, and confused wealth with worth. We shrug off the moral decay at the top because we’ve been taught to believe “that’s just politics.” But it’s not just politics. It’s our reflection in the mirror of power. How did this become ok? This Washington Post video clip from 2005 should tell us everything we need to know about President Trump’s character even after his Epstein fallout. [https://www.npr.org/2016/10/07/497087141/donald-trump-caught-on-tape-making-vulgar-remarks-about-women] The real bombshell in all this isn’t a list of names, 1000s of emails implicating the President’s egregious actions, or past leaders’ transgressions - it’s what those names say about who we are and what we’ve let happen to our democracy. If we keep electing people based on slogans instead of substance, donors instead of dignity, we’ll just keep getting the same predators with better PR teams. Trump is just the latest example in a long line of corruption. But it needs to end now. If we want a better America, we have to demand people with character in power. Leaders who see service as a duty, not a grift to make billions on the back of working Americans. Truth as a standard, not lies, deflection, and soundbites. And integrity as a requirement, not an option. We have to stop defending the indefensible. And that’s the only story worth breaking. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit gross4az.substack.com [https://gross4az.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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