One Nation Under Jeffrey Epstein

What happens when the rich and powerful decide predators are more valuable than justice? Even the president’s followers are pissed off. And they should be.

This isn’t a red or blue issue. It’s not partisan. It’s the fact that Jeffrey Epstein, one of the most well-known sex traffickers in modern history, operated in plain sight, with protection from every corner of power. He hosted presidents, was courted by royalty, and was funded by billionaires. After his arrest, the list of men he trafficked for vanished into a void of sealed records, erased tapes, and orchestrated silence.

This country isn’t under God. It’s under Jeffrey Epstein.

Because if you look at who’s still walking free, still shaping laws, still sitting on boards, still running institutions, you’ll see a system that didn’t just tolerate Epstein. It needed him. Until it didn’t.

When Epstein was free, he was useful. He offered access. He gathered secrets. He helped the rich and powerful exploit the vulnerable and stay untouchable. But when he was arrested and locked in a cell, he became a liability.

His usefulness ended the moment he couldn’t control the narrative anymore. That’s when the system moved to protect itself by erasing him. The guards “fell asleep.” The cameras “malfunctioned.” The cellmate was removed. The story was wrapped up. The message was clear.

He no longer served power, so he was eliminated to serve it one last time. And the public was told, once again, to move on. This isn’t dysfunction. It’s design.

The silence, the forgetting, the deflection, the spin. The way victims are made invisible. The way institutions rewrite history in real time. The system that protects predators is working exactly as intended.

We’re told the “client list” doesn’t exist, Maxwell’s conviction is enough, we should trust the process, and that justice was served.

Justice does not seal the names, vanish the tapes, or get rid of the witness before he can speak. Epstein didn’t act alone. He didn’t die alone. And this isn’t over.

One nation under Jeffrey Epstein means a system that protects predators until they threaten the brand. It means a culture that cultivates the public’s complicity. It means institutions that would rather sacrifice a man than tell the truth.

This is bigger than Epstein. Bigger than Maxwell. Bigger than any one predator. It’s a system that lifts, shields, and replaces them as needed. It will never stop until we name it, reject it, and build something better.

Predator Week at Trauma Aware America isn’t about sensationalism. It’s about clarity. Prevention. Power literacy. Public health.

If you’ve been asking why nothing adds up, this is why.

If you’ve felt sick about the silence, this is for you.

If you’re ready to say, “No more,” you belong here.

Because once you see it, you don’t unsee it.

And once enough of us do, the whole thing falls apart.

Find info on all things predator during Predator Week at Trauma Aware America, July 20-26.

This post includes content generated by ChatGPT, a language model developed by OpenAI. The AI-generated content has been reviewed and edited for accuracy and relevance.

About Shay Seaborne, CPTSD

Former tall ship sailor turned trauma awareness activist-artist Shay Seaborne, CPTSD has studied the neurobiology of fear / trauma /PTSD since 2015. She writes, speaks, teaches, and makes art to convey her experiences as well as her understanding of the neurobiology of fear, trauma theory, and principles of trauma recovery. A native of Northern Virginia, Shay settled in Delaware to sail KALMAR NYCKEL, the state’s tall ship. She wishes everyone could recognize PTSD is not a mental health problem, but a neurophysiological condition rooted in dysregulation, our mainstream culture is neuro-negative, and we need to understand we can heal ourselves and each other through awareness, understanding, and safe connection.
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