It's so funny watching Democrats and their brainless voters having conniptions over Epstein and these mythical files. But here's the best part:
Jeffrey Epstein’s resentment toward Donald Trump
JEFFREY EPSTEIN’S RESENTMENT TOWARD DONALD TRUMP. There’s no doubt Jeffrey Epstein thought he was a very, very smart guy. “He always thought he was the smartest person in the room,” said one associate. Another said Epstein “thought he was smarter than the next guy.” When in 2008 Epstein pleaded guilty to procurement of a minor for prostitution, his defense asked for leniency based on his “unique intellect.”
Someone with such high self-regard can be deeply disturbed if a friend or associate, or a former friend or associate, achieves more, makes more money, and rises higher up society’s ladder than the person who feels he is the smartest guy in the room. Reading through Epstein’s emails released by Republicans on the House Oversight Committee, one gets the impression that Epstein was troubled by the success of his former friend Donald Trump, as he watched Trump take a wildly improbable path from successful developer to television star to president of the United States. At the same time, of course, Epstein was pleading guilty to sex crimes, struggling to recover, and then finding himself charged with even more serious sex crimes. Suicide in a jail cell was in his future, while Trump was in the White House.
“President Trump’s long friendship with Jeffrey Epstein came to an apparent end in the mid-2000s,” wrote the New York Times. “But Mr. Epstein remained intently focused on Mr. Trump for years afterward, seeking to exploit the remnants of their relationship up until his arrest on federal sex-trafficking charges in 2019.” As Trump rose, the New York Times said, Epstein tried to regain status by “casting himself as the ultimate Trump translator.” But the smartest guy in the room was fuming over the success of someone he felt was so clearly inferior to himself.
“Your world does not understand how dumb [Trump] really is,” Epstein wrote to former Treasury Secretary and Harvard President Lawrence Summers in May 2017, Trump’s fourth month in office.
www.washingtonexaminer.com
Jeffrey Epstein’s resentment toward Donald Trump
JEFFREY EPSTEIN’S RESENTMENT TOWARD DONALD TRUMP. There’s no doubt Jeffrey Epstein thought he was a very, very smart guy. “He always thought he was the smartest person in the room,” said one associate. Another said Epstein “thought he was smarter than the next guy.” When in 2008 Epstein pleaded guilty to procurement of a minor for prostitution, his defense asked for leniency based on his “unique intellect.”
Someone with such high self-regard can be deeply disturbed if a friend or associate, or a former friend or associate, achieves more, makes more money, and rises higher up society’s ladder than the person who feels he is the smartest guy in the room. Reading through Epstein’s emails released by Republicans on the House Oversight Committee, one gets the impression that Epstein was troubled by the success of his former friend Donald Trump, as he watched Trump take a wildly improbable path from successful developer to television star to president of the United States. At the same time, of course, Epstein was pleading guilty to sex crimes, struggling to recover, and then finding himself charged with even more serious sex crimes. Suicide in a jail cell was in his future, while Trump was in the White House.
“President Trump’s long friendship with Jeffrey Epstein came to an apparent end in the mid-2000s,” wrote the New York Times. “But Mr. Epstein remained intently focused on Mr. Trump for years afterward, seeking to exploit the remnants of their relationship up until his arrest on federal sex-trafficking charges in 2019.” As Trump rose, the New York Times said, Epstein tried to regain status by “casting himself as the ultimate Trump translator.” But the smartest guy in the room was fuming over the success of someone he felt was so clearly inferior to himself.
“Your world does not understand how dumb [Trump] really is,” Epstein wrote to former Treasury Secretary and Harvard President Lawrence Summers in May 2017, Trump’s fourth month in office.
Jeffrey Epstein's resentment toward Donald Trump
The new Epstein emails show not only Trump's innocence, but Epstein's resentment toward his former friend's success.