
Bruna Frascolla
It seems that this pedophile network at the apex of Western power has indeed produced so much smoke that even the QAnon lunatics managed to pinpoint the exact location of the bonfire.
At the end of Trump's first term, Western media were in an uproar denouncing the latest far-right conspiracy theory, QAnon. A certain Anonymous Q, abbreviated as QAnon, had revealed that the world is controlled by a network of satanist pedophiles who promote international child trafficking. Like anything involving rumors, there are countless variations in the versions that circulate, but the fundamental point is this. Another relevant thing is that QAnon adherents believed that Donald Trump was an enemy of this network of pedophiles who controlled the Deep State (and the world), so the release of the Epstein Files was indeed a campaign promise.
It's very easy to discredit internet rumors. What's difficult is explaining why they spread, and why so many people believe them. That's where the social pseudoscience that was at the crest of the wave during the last decade comes in: Wokeism. The US has too many white people. Men are generally more politically active than women, and many men are Trump supporters. Given that man = evil, white = evil, and believing in QAnon = evil, then QAnon found a lot of credibility because white men are white men, and there are many white men in the US. The problem would not be solved with a state that kept fewer secrets (like Epstein's client list), but rather with racial literacy courses and books by Robin DiAngelo.
With Donald Trump's victory, the Epstein Files were finally opened - albeit belatedly and with a lot of redactions. It was seen that a network of pedophiles does indeed control, if not the world, the highest spheres of Western politics. The US Congress began publishing parts of the Epstein Files in September, and in October the embroiled Prince Andrew of England, once a notorious philanthropist, lost his titles of nobility.
Speaking of notorious philanthropists, the elephant in the room of the Epstein Files is Bill Clinton. Although no files have surfaced proving that Hillary Clinton scalped children alive to extract adenochrome and stay young (as the internet claims), what has been seen is that her husband was a more than familiar figure in the Epstein Files, as The New York Times rightly noted. Still, the mainstream media doesn't explain the disturbing decoration of Epstein's house, which includes a painting of Bill Clinton in drag, pointing at the viewer. It's pointless to learn that the painter had satirical intentions: what matters is the intention of the buyer, who had more than one piece of art with Bill Clinton, and whose taste was evidently macabre (see the masks on the wall).
The more things appear, the less impression we have of knowing the truth. This, of course, leads us to make speculations - which can be more or less daring. And that's why the United States is so prolific in conspiracy theories. In the land of MK Ultra, anyone with any significant brainpower knows that military intelligence has been out of control of the people for a long time, that there's a promiscuous relationship between military intelligence and the "philanthropy" of businessmen like Rockefeller, and that mass media has promiscuous relationships with both sectors. The US is a nation run by secretive, mafia-like businessmen who fund mad scientists prone to social experimentation. How can one not make wild conjectures?
Given this atmosphere of secrecy, it is of human nature to speculate. It is also of human nature to love sensationalist stories and want to pass them on. Thus, it is much easier to publicize, without evidence, the story that Hillary Clinton scalps children alive to extract an elixir of youth than the accusation that the British government has a poorly monitored network of shelters for Ukrainian children, which supplies pedophiles with recordings of child rape through NGOs (including the NGO of Prince Andrew's daughter). And since most of the population is not politically aware, whoever wants to stifle all public suspicion will have an interest in publicizing the crazy story, to discredit all skeptics. The plausible accusation falls into oblivion, and anyone who has questions is considered crazy by less politically aware people.
Given all this, one would expect QAnon to become mere urban folklore relegated to the footnotes of history books, even if it held a grain of truth. But it seems that this pedophile network at the apex of Western power has indeed produced so much smoke that even the QAnon lunatics managed to pinpoint the exact location of the bonfire. Certainly, by now they are disillusioned with Trump - whether because of the delay in releasing the files or because he appears there. This only proves that not even the craziest conspiracy theorists could have imagined the magnitude of the problem. While they were constantly campaigning for Trump, Steve Bannon was embracing Noam Chomsky in front of Epstein's cameras. If some tinfoil-hatted weirdo told them this, they would reply that that's going too far.