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Former President dismisses sex trafficking documents as a conspiracy, urging a focus on healthcare while global elites tremble at the unravelling of the century’s darkest secrets.

Former President dismisses sex trafficking documents as a conspiracy, urging a focus on healthcare while global elites tremble at the unravelling of the century’s darkest secrets.
In a display of characteristic brazenness, Donald Trump has demanded the United States "move on" from the Jeffrey Epstein files, dismissing the explosive documents as a "conspiracy" against him despite the global outcry for justice.
This calculated dismissal, delivered from the campaign trail, attempts to slam the door on one of the century's darkest scandals just as the heat rises. Trump's sudden pivot to "healthcare" is a desperate diversion, ignoring the victims' cries and the looming congressional testimony of Bill and Hillary Clinton, signalling a terrifying desire by the political class to bury the truth for expediency.
The former President's comments came during a heated exchange with reporters, where he lashed out at the media for persisting with questions about the disgraced financier. "It is really time for the country to get on to something else," Trump declared, his voice dripping with frustration. He insisted that the files, which have implicated a cavalcade of global power players, were merely a "Democratic problem" and not a Republican one.
This narrative, however, crumbles under scrutiny. The Epstein files have cast a long, dark shadow over the entire American political establishment, transcending party lines. By framing the release as a personal attack—"nothing came out about me other than it was a conspiracy against me"—Trump is employing a classic diversionary tactic. He is attempting to insulate himself from the radioactive fallout that has already claimed the careers of high-profile figures across the Atlantic.
Trump's call to "move on" is not merely a suggestion; it is a command to the American public to develop amnesia. It ignores the fundamental reality that the Epstein saga is not just about political gossip—it is about a systemic failure of justice for the dozens of young women trafficked and abused by a ring protected by wealth and power. To "move on" now would be to grant a final, posthumous victory to Epstein and his enablers.
The timing of his remarks is impeccable, coinciding with a renewed push by Democrats to regain the narrative ahead of the 2026 midterms. By trying to shift the conversation to healthcare, Trump is betting that the American voter is too exhausted by scandal to care about accountability. But for the survivors, and for a public weary of elite impunity, the files are not a distraction—they are the evidence.
"We are not moving on," said a survivor advocate in response to Trump's comments. "We are just getting started. The truth has no expiration date, and no amount of political deflection can hide the crimes of the powerful."
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