it’s been a long time coming
it’s fearless
big reputation
and they said speak no-ow
into folkloreee
MY NAME IS TAYLOR AND I WAS BORN IN 1989
straight from the tortured poets department
evermoreee
loving him was red re-e-e-e-e-ed
its u and me
meet me at midnight
lover
NICE!
lover
What should alarm us about the Epstein files isn’t just the appalling details.
It is the degree to which enormously wealthy and powerful people live by their own rules — and continue to get away with it.
It’s a club where the rules and the law don't apply. And you’re not in it.
There are troubling intersections between Jeffrey Epstein’s circle, figures in Trump’s orbit such as Steve Bannon, and the broader ecosystem of European populism. In documents released in January 2026, Epstein appears in correspondence involving Bannon, who has long sought to build bridges with leaders like @MLP_officiel , @matteosalvinimi and @PM_ViktorOrban — politicians repeatedly noted for their political proximity to the Kremlin.
This is not proof of direct involvement, but it underlines once again how authoritarian influence, money and networks can overlap in dangerous ways. The case of Marine Le Pen’s party, which received a Russian-linked loan in 2014, is a confirmed example of these entanglements. In Italy, serious journalistic investigations have also raised questions about possible Russian channels around Salvini’s Lega.
Democracies cannot afford complacency: journalists must investigate, institutions must ensure transparency, and public opinion must demand answers — especially when Moscow’s shadow looms over Europe’s extremes.