The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #174576 Message #4235979
Posted By: Backwoodsman
20-Feb-26 - 09:32 AM
Thread Name: Convicted felon US Prez 47/Don't Say His Name
Subject: RE: Convicted felon US Prez 47/Don't Say His Name
“This morning, British police arrested a member of the royal family.
Let that sit for a second.
The United Kingdom, a country with a constitutional monarchy, just arrested the King's own brother, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. Stripped of his title. Removed from his palace. And this morning, taken into custody on his 66th birthday. On suspicion of misconduct in public office. Over his ties to Jeffrey Epstein. The King of England released a statement within hours. He didn't hedge. He didn't spin. He said five words that no one in American leadership has had the courage to say: "The law must take its course."
And you know what the British Prime Minister said? "Nobody is above the law."
A monarchy. Holding its own royal accountable. In 2026. Norway charged its former Prime Minister with aggravated corruption over Epstein ties. The British ambassador to the United States was fired and resigned from the House of Lords. Slovakia's national security adviser, gone. A Swedish UN official gone. France opened investigations. Poland launched a task force to find victims. Latvia, Lithuania, investigations opened. The UN called the Epstein files evidence of what may be "one of the greatest criminal enterprises" of our time, with crimes that could meet the legal threshold of crimes against humanity.
Europe is doing this. Country after country after country. Careers ended. Investigations launched. Arrests made. Not because these people were accused of assault, most of them weren't, but because they maintained relationships with a convicted child sex trafficker after he was convicted. Because in functioning democracies, that alone is disqualifying.
Now look across the Atlantic. What is America doing?
Our Attorney General, the one who promised she would follow the truth, sat before Congress and refused to turn around and face the survivors in the room. Every single one of them raised their hand when asked if the Justice Department had refused to meet with them. Every. Single. One. She called their pain "theatrics." She called a bipartisan congressman who co-wrote the transparency law a man with "derangement syndrome." She called a sitting member of Congress a "washed-up loser lawyer." She was caught surveilling which Epstein files members of Congress were reading. And when asked how many co-conspirators she had indicted in over a year as Attorney General, the answer was zero.
Zero.
The Department of Justice redacted the names of powerful men while accidentally publishing nude photographs of trafficking survivors. They fired the lead prosecutor on the case. The Deputy Attorney General announced there would be no additional prosecutions. And Ghislaine Maxwell, the woman convicted of recruiting and grooming children, was moved to a minimum-security facility with puppy time and private workouts.
This is not justice. This is a cover-up wearing a badge.
But here is what I need you to understand. I am not writing this from a place of despair. I am writing this from a place of conviction.
Because we have been here before. We have been in moments where the powerful believed they were untouchable and the institutions meant to protect us bent to protect them instead. And every single time, every time, the American people stood up and said no. Not here. Not us. Not our children.
The soul of this nation is not defined by the people who failed it. It is defined by the people who fought to reclaim it. From Valley Forge to Seneca Falls. From the Edmund Pettus Bridge to every survivor who walked into that hearing room last week and raised their hand even though the most powerful lawyer in the country wouldn't look them in the eye.
History will not remember her name. But it will remember theirs.
Those survivors are more American than anyone protecting the Epstein class will ever be.
This Attorney General must resign, be fired, or be impeached. Not as a political act, but as a moral one. Because if a monarchy can hold its prince accountable, then surely, surely, a democracy can hold its attorney general accountable.
We are the country that taught the world what accountability looks like. We will be that country again.
For every survivor who has been gaslit by the institutions that were supposed to protect them, we see you. For every child whose name should have been redacted but wasn't, we will fight for you. For Jack and Charlotte and every kid who deserves to grow up in a country where no one is above the law, not a prince, not a president's friend, not a single soul on this earth, this ends now.
We are better than this. We have always been better than this.
And together, we will prove it”
I hope he’s right, but I’m not holding my breath. Bastards, every one who supports and protects The Orange Wankmaggot.