Showing posts with label Yeoman's twenty-third law of behavior. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yeoman's twenty-third law of behavior. Show all posts

Monday, November 17, 2025

Lex Anteinternet: Epstein survivors issue urgent plea to Congress, Trump now wants materials released, and the ultimate corruption of money.

Lex Anteinternet: Epstein survivors issue urgent plea to Congress, T...

Epstein survivors issue urgent plea to Congress, Trump now wants materials released, and the ultimate corruption of money.


Hmmm. . . that's interesting.  Trump's now okay with it.

Trump and his acolytes went from demanding their release, to absolutely opposing it.  Now they're in favor of it again.

What gives?

Well one thing may simply be that so much time has gone by, these files are now scrubbed.  Sounds conspiratorial, I know, but files can be scrubbed, or lost.

The problem here is that the whole thing sounds so, well, all over the place that an effective scrubbing might be impossible.

Another one is that Trump might already know it won't get past the Senate.  Just yesterday loyal flunky John Barrasso stated he wasn't sure if they'd vote on it or not.  Figures like Barrasso figure their Senate seats are so safe that they're untouchable.  They aren't, and he was running pretty scared last time, but they tend to think that way.

Or it just isn't worth the political capital that it was burning up.  That would suggest that whoever is getting protected just isn't worth this level of damage, particularly that some formerly loyal MAGA's have gone overboard into the lifeboats.  The Republicans only barely control the House now and are set to lose them in the midterms.  If only two or three more Republicans in the House abandoned ship, Mike Smarmy Johnson is done for and the GOP would start to break free of King Donny.  Two Republican House members, including amazingly Marjorie Taylor Greene, are openly poking the king and he's been able to do nothing about it.

Yet another is that, related to above, Trump just intends to lie his way out of whatever they say, if they're damaging to him, and so far we have no reason to believe that in spite of his personally gross behavior towards women, that he's implicated in kiddy diddling.  At the worst, it's possible that he knew what was going on and didn't do anything about it,  and there's likely a lot of rich and powerful people in that boat.  Or maybe he actually didn't.  Epstein was a creep, but just having young bikini wearing women on the premises doesn't necessarily mean that diddling is going on.  So whatever is in there, he may be confident won't touch him directly, and whomever it does, well he can always say it includes Democrats too, which it probably does.

Which may be, after all is said and done, the biggest lesson.  Since Ronald Reagan this country has followed the absurd notion that's what's good for the wealthy is good for everyone.  As Oliver Bullough has stated; "All money corrupts, and big money corrupts bigly".   

Businessmen plotted to take over the government and install fascism in the 1930s.  The plot failed, and nobody was prosecuted.  Reagan sold the American public the idea that vast wealth trickles down.

Epstein hung out with the rich and powerful. Some of them he supplied with teenage girls.  The money didn't trickle down, and its not trickling down.  Rather, it's morally corrosive and effectively the Business Plot ultimately won out with the election of Donald Trump, aided by the Democrats prime strategy being a judicial coup rather than an oligarchic one.  

There's still time to reverse that. This might be a good place to start.

Lex Anteinternet: Yeoman's Laws of Behavior

Lex Anteinternet: Yeoman's Laws of Behavior

Yeoman's Twenty-third Law of Behavior:  "All money corrupts, and big money corrupts bigly" Oliver Bullough.

Certain societies worship wealth, but this rule is invariably true, although there are plenty of individual exceptions.  

Wealth corrupts, it simply does.  The New Testament councils that "Love of money is the root of all evil", and while some people acquire vast wealth simply because they love work, quite often it's mixed in with the love of money.  Beyond that, money at some point both blinds people to the consequences of their own actions, and to the realities of that.

The corruption of money keeps people working in positions they should yield to younger people who are kept from moving up, and therefore kept at a fiscal and societal disadvantage.  It leads to the destruction of land, people, and the environment.  And big money nearly invariably brings in extra corruption on a personal level.

Big money attracts sycophants who assure the wealthy person that his actions are benign, or that he's smart, and deserves to be the exception to the rule.  It reduces people to objects, and allows people to believe that their personal destruction of others is merited.  

“No one can serve two masters.m He will either hate one and love the other, or be devoted to one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and mammon."  Matthew, Chapter 6.

Lex Anteinternet: Epstein survivors issue urgent plea to Congress, Trump now wants materials released, and the ultimate corruption of money.

Lex Anteinternet: Epstein survivors issue urgent plea to Congress, T... :  Epstein survivors issue urgent plea to Congress, Trump now wants ...