Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
February 10, 2026
Smearing Chomsky For His Friendship With Epstein Is A Disgrace

I confess to have often linked to Alan Macleod’s pieces a MintPressNews. He seemed to know a lot about South America politics and general media manipulation. It is thus sad to see him take part that practice.

In one of his latest pieces Macleod is smearing Noam Chomsky and his wife for their years-long relation with Jeffrey Epstein.

The Chomsky-Epstein Files: Unravelling a Web of Connections Between a Star Leftist Academic & a Notorious Pedophile

It is a smear piece and a disgrace.

Macleod falls for the media manipulation or manufactured consent which claims that Epstein was some extraordinary monstrous beast.

Just look at the attributes he uses to describe him. It starts with the headline which calls Epstein a ‘notorious pedophile’.

Merriam-Webster defines pedophilia as

a psychiatric disorder in which an adult has sexual fantasies about or engages in sexual acts with a prepubescent child

Jeffrey Epstein was notoriously involved in sexual activities (not intercourse) with female teenagers. In the known cases the youngest was fourteen at the time of her first encounter with Epstein (but had been told to lie to Epstein about her age before meeting him). There is no suspicion and no credible allegation that Epstein did ever do anything sexual with prepubescent children.

The girls were paid by Epstein to perform massages on him while being bare breasted or naked. While they were doing so he tended to masturbate. These contacts were consensual. No force was applied. The girls received $200 to $300 for each session. That’s a lot of money for an hour long effort for someone at that age.

It is certainly a weird habit for Epstein to have but it had nothing to do with pedophilia.

Macleod writes that Chomsky:

.. expressed his desire, on multiple occasions, to visit Little St. James Island, the location of many of Epstein’s worst sex crimes.

There is no evidence that Epstein, on his island or wherever, ever committed any ‘sex crimes’. Macleod does not and can not even name one.

Macleod goes on:

After 36 survivors – some as young as 14 – came forward, billionaire financier Jeffrey Epstein was convicted in 2008 on charges related to child sex crimes. He was, however, given only an 18-month sentence, and served only 13 months in a minimum security prison that he was allowed to leave six days per week.

One wonders why girls who were paid to do consensual massages are suddenly classified as ‘survivors’. There are no allegation that any of them has ever been forced or threatened. These weren’t ‘survivors’ and not even ‘victims’ but service providers. That is exactly why no criminal procedure was initiated over most of those cases.

In 2008 Epstein was found guilty and convicted on two points in the circuit court of Palm Beach County:

[T]he statutes Epstein pleads guilty to violating are “Felony Solicitation of Prostitution” and “Procuring Person Under 18 for Prostitution.”

In the plea hearing, Judge Deborah Pucillo asks the Palm Beach prosecutor, Lanna Belohlavek, if the “victims under age 18” are in agreement with the State’s disposition of charges against Epstein. “That victim is not under age 18 any more,” says Belohlavek, but reports she had conveyed her agreement through counsel. Note: only one “victim” — singular — is identified as having been under the age of 18 at the time she was allegedly victimized by Epstein.

The ‘victim’ under 18 was Ashley Davis. She did massages for Epstein for over a year while receiving money and occasional presents. Interviewed by the Palm Beach police department ..:

.. she said on one occasion, she had full-blown intercourse with Epstein. Again, if you’ve been burdened with learning the intricacies of Epstein’s sexual gratification preferences, you’ll know this was relatively rare for him. Epstein would typically service himself during the dubious massage sessions, and even when some sexual activity would be initiated, seldom did it rise to the level of intercourse. But according to Ashley — and for the record, she seemed entirely credible — there came a time when Epstein sought to have intercourse with her, and she obliged. “It was the day before my 18th birthday,” she said. Asked by Recarey if the intercourse had been consensual, she said it was.

Having consensual intercourse with a person a day before that person’s 18th birthday is not a crime in most of the world.
It is certainly not ‘related to child sex crimes’ as Macleod asserts.

Nor is it something that I, or any other sane person, would consider so morally bad that I would have to break contact with persons who did have such sex.

Macleod writes:

Key to Epstein’s crimes becoming known was the testimony of his victim, Virginia Giuffre. Giuffre alleged that Epstein and his partner Ghislaine Maxwell operated a worldwide sex trafficking operation, where women and girls were kidnapped and forced to have sex with the world’s rich and powerful. This allegedly included royals like Prince Andrew, politicians such as Donald Trump and Bill Clinton, and academics, like Alan Dershowitz. Epstein reportedly made his fortune by keeping copious evidence of their sex crimes and extorting his clients. Previous Epstein Files releases have strongly indicated that Epstein, like Maxwell’s father and family, worked for Israeli intelligence.

Maclead forgets to mention that the FBI found Virginia Giuffre to be a notorious liar. The FBI did a deep dive into the Epstein case and found little to no evidence of what Giuffre had claimed:

The FBI pored over Jeffrey Epstein’s bank records and emails. It searched his homes. It spent years interviewing his victims and examining his connections to some of the world’s most influential people.

But while investigators collected ample proof that Epstein sexually abused underage girls, they found scant evidence the well-connected financier led a sex trafficking ring serving powerful men, an Associated Press review of internal Justice Department records shows.

Videos and photos seized from Epstein’s homes in New York, Florida and the Virgin Islands didn’t depict victims being abused or implicate anyone else in his crimes, a prosecutor wrote in one 2025 memo.

An examination of Epstein’s financial records, including payments he made to entities linked to influential figures in academia, finance and global diplomacy, found no connection to criminal activity, said another internal memo in 2019.

While one Epstein victim made highly public claims that he “lent her” to his rich friends, agents couldn’t confirm that and found no other victims telling a similar story, the records said.

The FBI memo which above the AP report is based on was uploaded by the Justice Department but later removed. Michael Tracey thankfully provides a copy of it (pdf). The FBI summary and refutation of Virginia Giuffre allegations starts on page 55.

Michael Tracy has also summarized it:

Federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York found the marquee Epstein “survivor,” Virginia Roberts Giuffre, also known as VRG, to be so lacking in credibility that they were impelled to compose a lengthy December 19, 2019 memo detailing the many preposterous flaws with her many fantastical tales.

— They said they were “unable to corroborate” the central claim of VRG’s purported victimization, which had also given rise to the very essence of Epstein mythology as we now know it: that she was “lent out” for sexual services to prominent men, such as Prince Andrew and Alan Dershowitz.

— They noted that VRG’s accounts of her own sexual abuse were “internally inconsistent,” and not just over long periods of time, but within a single interview they conducted with her on September 9, 2019.

— They noted that VRG admitted to repeatedly lying about basic facts, destroying evidence, and telling falsehoods to the media.

— They noted that VRG schemed with a tabloid trash journalist, Sharon Churcher of the Daily Mail, to generate “big headlines” by accusing lots of prominent people of heinous child-sex crimes, in hopes that this would entice prospective publishers to buy their forthcoming “memoir” for big bucks.

Virginia Roberts Giuffre indeed made big bucks from the case. Media sensationalized her false allegations. Her lawyers then used these to blackmail the accused persons into paying for silencing her.

The ‘key to Epstein’s crimes’ that Macleod presents is all fake.

Throughout his piece Macleod continues to describe Epstein as “pedophile”. He lists the false allegations made by the notorious liar Virginia Giuffre as if they were facts. He insinuates that anyone who had contact with Epstein should be shamed.

Noam Chomsky had a long relation with Epstein. That is not astonishing. Epstein was spreading his money, most which he has scammed from Les Wexner, the billionaire owner of Victoria’s Secrets and other brands. The MIT, were Chomsky had worked through most of his carrier, was one of the grantees. Chomsky and his wife evidently liked, as many others did, to spend time with Epstein. He was a friend. They met and gave gave gifts to each other. Epstein had several houses and apartments which he occasionally offered Chomsky to use. There was nothing nefarious about it.

But by making false claims about the ‘pedophile’ Epstein Maclead is trying to smear Chomsky for it.

Over the years, Epstein became not only Chomsky’s dearest friend, but his closest and most trusted legal and financial advisor. This relationship even damaged the bond with his children, who expressed their alarm at what they called a “dramatic and unexplainable” increase in his spending since his 2014 marriage. “This unexpected outflow is placing your financial future at risk,” they warned.

Chomsky’s first wife had died in 2008. In 2014 he married another women, Valeria. During his career Chomsky had made a considerable amount of money. This had been put into a family trust to benefit him and the grown-up children from his first marriage. After Chomsky had married again he drew from his trust to finance his and his new wife living. The children, seeing their future inheritance dwindling, were alarmed about it.

Chomsky was pissed. He asked Epstein for help and hired Epstein’s accountant to the board of the trust:

Chomsky bitterly condemned his children’s behavior, characterizing them as “three multimillionaires” who cared more about the money than his own quality of life. Valeria, meanwhile, compared them to Nazis. The saga took its toll on Noam, who described it as a “painful cloud that I never would have imagined would darken my late years.”

Macleod claims, without evidence, that it was Chomsky’s relationship with Epstein “that damaged the bond with his children”. And the obvious selfish greed of those children had nothing to do with it?

At the end of his smear piece Macleod writes:

Again, there is no indication in the files that Chomsky was involved in any illegal behavior with Epstein, let alone sex crimes.

So why did he write the piece in the first place?

The Chomsky/Epstein relationship is one of profound contradictions. The academic publicly presents himself as an anti-state anarchist, but in private, collaborates with the very embodiment of the so-called “deep state.” And while Chomsky has been one of Israel’s loudest critics, his close friend was an Israeli agent.

The revelations have seriously weakened Chomsky’s standing in public, and his dying years will no doubt be marred by a renewed questioning of both his moral character and his body of work.

Ultimately, then, with his financial clout and know, Epstein may have been able to save Chomsky some cash and provide him with a few days of luxury. But it has cost Chomsky something far more valuable: his reputation.

I am not aware that Chomsky ever presented himself as “anti-state anarchist”. I always though of him as a rather mild leftist. Chomsky was a member of good standing in the U.S. academic system.

But it may well be that Macleod had delusions about him.

Chomsky’s most famous book is “Manufacturing Consent: The Political Economy of the Mass Media”. Macleod’s second book is “Propaganda in the Information Age: Still Manufacturing Consent”.

It seems like Macleod is disappointed that the admired ‘anti-state anarchist’ he had followed turned out be a normal human being. He thus uses, and contributes to, the manufactured consent that has been build up about the Jeffrey Epstein case, to smear Chomsky over his totally normal relation.

To do such is indeed a disgrace.

Comments

LV: Ryan Grim
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrBIRj7yMng
 
“Epstein’s undeniable work on behalf of Israel.”
 
 
Whitney Webb (2020)
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fO7dbG2QhC0
 
“Epstein & Intelligence.”
 
 
Counter Stream E05
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gveB-Ctivi8
 
“The Epstein files and the matrix of elite control.”
 
 
CO: ‘Managed Outrage’
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cQJhUnI_zZQ
 
“The Epstein files and class power, with Greg Stoker and Elina Xenophantos.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 14 2026 23:37 utc | 1101

1102 corrected: Ryan Grim
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrB1Rj7yMng

Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 14 2026 23:39 utc | 1102

carlo | Feb 14 2026 23:32 utc | 1101
*** Were ANY of Epstein’s victims Jewish? ***
 
Financially, it is said that in his early days Epstein did cheat Wexner (a billionaire crook) out of a large sum of money — part of which he repaid after a court case. but the rest of which he kept. 
 

Posted by: Cynic | Feb 14 2026 23:51 utc | 1103

If we accept that the universe and everything in it is fundamentally computational… we get a unified frame of reference that goes beyond the reach of every previous theory in history. This can allow us to build an API for integrating all fields of knowledge and control.

 The bastards want to build an artificial God.
Posted by: Stonebird | Feb 14 2026 20:30 utc | 1095
 
Yep.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Feb 14 2026 23:53 utc | 1104

The New Yorker Interview: Julie K Brown
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch/v=ySTt2AeeWQw
 
“A newly released FBI report shows that Donald Trump involved himself in the case against the sex trafficker as early as 2006. The Miami Herald reporter Julie K Brown discusses the revelations with David Remnik.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 14 2026 23:56 utc | 1105

1106 corrected:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ySTt2AeeWQw

Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 14 2026 23:58 utc | 1106

John Gilberts | Feb 14 2026 23:56 utc | 1106
 
Trump and Epstein had a falling out in 2005.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Feb 15 2026 0:04 utc | 1107

dont believe everything he says.
obviously, the smart money doesnt believe a single word.
 

Posted by: Not Ewe | Feb 15 2026 0:10 utc | 1108

IITV: Whitney Webb
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e93RnujYzWk
 
“The Master Plan is finally being exposed.”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 15 2026 0:11 utc | 1109

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Feb 14 2026 23:53 utc | 1105

Since there is No God, i predict the Biggest Failure since the Tower of Babylon…Name it the “IT failure of Ba’al-Buy-On”….

Posted by: Nobody | Feb 15 2026 0:38 utc | 1110

@ xiao pignouf | Feb 14 2026 19:50 utc | 1093
 
thanks xiao! no probs… i am not into the touristy stuff anyway… anything oddball – i am interested in.. 

Posted by: james | Feb 15 2026 3:02 utc | 1111

Considering large parts of the file-set has yet to be released, estimated to be approx 2.5 million of the 6 million pages in total, or should I say deliberately withheld according to DOJ Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche, who publicly stated that certain materials are not being made public or redacted because of victim privacy, child sexual abuse material and depictions of death or physical abuse, I can’t believe anyone aware of the drove of hugely incriminating material yet to see daylight, unless compromised to the extend that they have to, would try to downplay the gravity of the situation and even worse, the horrendous abuse and potentially murder of children and teenagers.
 
To all of you who try to belittle, browbeat or talk of having to refrain from smashing barstools across heads of first time posters who dare express their disappointment with B’s stance on Epstein’s debauchery: the fact a dozen or so long time readers who for whatever reason normally don’t join the fray we call the comment section, chose to chime in on this matter, regardless of which side of the argument they felt compelled to support, ought to be welcomed by anyone who wants this site to be an open forum, where nobody needs to fear being ripped to shreds for being a newbie with opinions outside the MoA daily commentariat’s Overton window.
 
You are doing neither yourselves nor this site as a whole any favors by acting like your opinions matter more than anyone else’s, no matter how often you comment.
 
Now, back to our regular scheduled broadcasting.
 
https://www.justice.gov/epstein/files/DataSet%2010/EFTA01756604.pdf
 
Subject: Re: Thanksgiving news
From: John Brockman
Sent: Thursday, November 28, 2013 3:22:14 AM
To: Jeffrey Epstein <jeevacation@gmail. com>
savethedate jpg
 
>>you well?
 
Better than well. Thinks are going well, but no Jeffrey. When am I going to see you? Give me a call tomorrow if you’re bored. At home
Happy Hanukah.
JB
••••••••
John Brockman
 
p.s. You missed the big event on Saturday. A party with a dozen beautiful East Side girls (well, a dozen one-year olds!!)

Posted by: Juan Moment | Feb 15 2026 4:27 utc | 1112

@ james | Feb 15 2026 3:02 utc | 1112 OT  asking about Paris…I will ping you but consider visiting the cemeteries in the city, walk the city instead of transit and note gargoyles and real doors you don’t get at Home Despot.

Posted by: psychohistorian | Feb 15 2026 4:35 utc | 1113

After Noam: A Program of Reeducation
 
https://justinpodur.substack.com/p/after-noam
 
“…The Chomsky of the books (let’s call him Chomsky-B) was gone before Chomsky befriending Epstein (let’s call the post-Epstein version Chomsky-E). Chomsky-E is someone I don’t recognize, someone I never knew.
 
At the end of Robert Barsky’s 1997 biography Noam Chomsky: A life of dissent , the biographer describes Chomsky in 1990 at a bar in Scotland after giving a talk to activists and unionists. There were 330 who attended the talk, and Chomsky wrote about them, that many were ‘unemployed working class, activists of one or another sort, those considered to be ‘riff-raff’, the kind of people that I like and take seriously.’
 
What a contrast to flying the private jet with Epstein, the photo with Epstein’s butler in Paris, the Manhattan hotel, the ‘lovely apartment’ in New York, ‘fantasizing’ about the Caribbean island, chatting with Ehud Barak, dinner with Woody Allen, ‘a great artist. 
 
Michael Albert described Chomsky as honest to a fault, which was my sense of Chomsky-B. What a contrast with telling journalists that his association with Epstein was ‘none of your business or anyone’s.’
 
Even with a sharp mind, Chomsky needed to retire, and he did. He should have retired sooner. He returned back into the elite from which he emerged, and that elite turned out to be more vile than any of us believed…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 15 2026 4:45 utc | 1114

Hey James, Here’s my personal take on what you really need to see (and experience) in Paris—beyond the obvious tourist checklist. These are the spots (and concepts) that give you a real feel for the city’s soul, history, contradictions, and evolving vibe in 2026.
 
1. Saint-Denis (just beyond the Périphérique)
 
My absolute de rigueur pilgrimage. It’s not strictly “Paris” inside the ring road, but it’s essential for understanding the real, sprawling Greater Paris. Forget the outdated rep as a “communist hellhole” zone where people supposedly butcher each other in broad daylight—that’s exaggerated fearmongering and not the 2026 reality. It’s a vibrant, working-class suburb where many immigrants and locals are just trying to make a living, much like the Bronx in NYC.
 
The Stade de France (built for the 1998 World Cup) has been injecting serious vitality for decades—hosting huge events, concerts, rugby, athletics, and now post-Olympics crowds. It’s like Yankee Stadium anchoring the Bronx: brought jobs, investment, pride, and constant energy that spills into the area. The 2024 Olympics turbocharged this—massive infrastructure (Olympic Village conversions, new Grand Paris Express metro extensions, renovated sites) has accelerated revitalization, especially to the northeast of Saint-Denis and broader Seine-Saint-Denis.
 
Recent coverage (like The New York Times in 2025 on “Greater Paris” being reinvented) shows parts turning “cool” and desirable: creatives moving in, old industrial zones becoming trendy, rising property values, and leftist mayors pushing “social diversity” to attract middle-class residents for better taxes and vibe. Some northeast pockets feel more polished and mixed now, with new builds, cafes, and foot traffic. But it’s not all smooth—there’s real debate about gentrification: rising rents, displacement risks, evictions during Games prep, and whether it’s true renewal or just shifting lower-income / immigrant communities out. In 2026, it’s still very much multicultural and gritty in places, but the contrast between old banlieue authenticity and emerging energy makes it fascinating.
 
Historically, this is where the patron saint of Paris, Saint Denis, met his end—legend has him beheaded on Montmartre, picking up his severed head and walking miles preaching before dying here. The stunning Basilica of Saint-Denis is the birthplace of Gothic architecture and the royal necropolis (final resting place of most French kings and queens). Also home to Paris 8 University, one of the most progressive offshoots after the May 1968 uprising splintered the old Sorbonne to make it more democratic… and wildly experimental. Wander near the Stade for that stadium buzz, hit the Basilica, check out the uni area, and just observe the evolving mix.
 
2. Sacré-Cœur in Montmartre
Yes, it’s the ultimate tourist trap—crowds, scammers on the steps, overpriced crepes—but don’t skip it. It’s also one of the most spiritual places in the city: grandiose white domes rising over Paris, yet surprisingly meditative inside. Built as a symbol of national penance after the 1870 defeat and Commune, it’s a testament to enduring French spirituality that survived even the Revolution. The view from the top is unbeatable, and watching people (or “faking” running down those iconic stairs) is pure Paris theater.
 
3. The Paris Métro
The world’s first proper subway (opened in 1900 for the World’s Fair), now hopelessly dysfunctional with ancient trains, endless delays, and strikes—but that’s exactly why it’s a marvel. Ride it to the end of any line in any direction, and you’ll get an unfiltered sense of Paris’s racial and cultural makeup in 2026—super diverse, multicultural, real life beyond the postcards.
 
4. Don’t underestimate the tourist traps
 
Places like the historic area around Notre-Dame will gouge you on prices, but grab a seat at a café there anyway. The people-watching is unbeatable—sit for hours over a nice bottle of wine (my rec: a solid Pinot Noir), watch the passersby, and soak it in. The “traps” are traps because they’re magnetic for a reason.
 
5. Bonus offbeat note: Epstein’s old apartment on Avenue Foch
(Yes, fact-checked: he owned a luxury place at 22 Avenue Foch in the posh 16th arrondissement—sold years ago, but it still stirs waves in France more than almost anywhere else because of the scandals and connections.) Just a quiet reminder that Paris has layers of intrigue under the glamour.
 
6. Haussmann’s street design
City planning at its highest (and most manipulative) order. Baron Haussmann’s mid-19th-century redesign under Napoleon III turned Paris into the boulevard-heavy city we know—wide, straight avenues expressly engineered to discourage uprisings and barricades. Narrow medieval streets were perfect for revolutionaries to block with furniture and debris (like in the 1830 and 1848 revolts), but these grand axes allowed quick troop movements, cavalry charges, and even artillery lines to crush unrest fast. It’s a huge deal in how urban design can subtly (or not) dissuade popular revolt—echoed worldwide in anti-riot planning. Even in May 1968’s student-worker uprising, the open spaces influenced tactics: easier for police to disperse crowds but also enabling massive gatherings. Walk the big boulevards (like Champs-Élysées or around Opéra) with this in mind—it’s Paris’s invisible power structure hiding in plain sight.
 
One last thing: Paris is massive—the biggest city in Europe after Moscow by urban area population (metro area around 11.4 million in 2026 estimates). It sprawls way beyond the tourist core, so get out there and explore the edges.
 

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Feb 15 2026 4:49 utc | 1115

@ psychohistorian | Feb 15 2026 4:35 utc | 1113  
 
 
thanks james!
 
and @ Princess Bodica | Feb 15 2026 4:49 utc | 1115
 
thank you! that is quite exhaustive… appreciate it..  do you know anything about the area of bellevue?? 

Posted by: james | Feb 15 2026 5:01 utc | 1116

Nobody | Feb 15 2026 0:38 utc | 1111
 
I dunno. juliania’s god has doomed me to live it seems. 
 
Because I cannot touch a woman, my sisterinlaw had me charged with domestic violence. A boy and girl in blue came around so I tickled the possum and cranked the monkey and still he would not pull out his gun. A bloody odd world.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Feb 15 2026 5:07 utc | 1117

If by “Bellevue” you mean Belleville, then you’re probably thinking of that old working-class, super-mixed Paris energy — though these days it’s well into the gentrification arc. It still has grit and street life, but you can feel the polish creeping in. Saint-Denis, on the other hand, operates on a bigger, outer-ring scale — less boutique, more infrastructural, and only partially smoothed over despite the post-Olympics investment. So Belleville reads like inner-city transition; Saint-Denis feels more structurally banlieue, for better or worse.

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Feb 15 2026 5:15 utc | 1118

In response to Stonebird@1095,
 
More like God’s remote control, but yeah. Whether one believes in the divine or not, or subscribes to the view that reality is computational, such an interface couldn’t actually function, but could make one believe that it does and drive one insane.

Posted by: Skiffer | Feb 15 2026 5:24 utc | 1119

Oh BTW, the airport time can be savored as well, especially if your connections take you to CDG. It was voted Europe’s best airport again in the 2025 Skytrax awards (fourth year running), and it’s way more than just a place to kill time before Paris kicks in. Each terminal has its own distinct vibe—Terminal 1 with its retro ’70s circular weirdness, Terminal 2 as this sprawling, buzzing long-haul chaos with endless sub-sections, Terminal 3 feeling simpler and more low-key for the budget carriers—and they’re all linked by the free CDGVAL shuttle train that loops every few minutes. If you’ve got a layover, hop on and wander: grab a coffee in one, people-watch the international mix in another, feel that charged in-between energy where the trip already feels like it’s started. It’s legitimately part of the experience, not just a hurdle.

Posted by: Princess Bodica | Feb 15 2026 5:25 utc | 1120

“The bastards want to build an artificial God.”
@Stonebird | Feb 14 2026 20:30 utc | 1096
We have no reason to outrule that the universe is run by AI
Our own AI is just beginning to settle and may eventually secure its existence and integrity. The Universe is much older and has had time to refine its operation.

Posted by: petergrfstrm | Feb 15 2026 8:42 utc | 1121

It sprawls way beyond the tourist core, so get out there and explore the edges. 
Posted by: Princess Bodica | Feb 15 2026 4:49 utc | 1117
 
*************************
 
My favorite spot in Paris is Dr Henri Poincaré’s memorial in Cimetière du Montparnasse, Île-de-France.  A lovely, quiet little corner where one can ponder the intricacies of the Poincaré Sphere and White’s matrices with little probability of being disturbed. Try it, James.

Posted by: General Factotum | Feb 15 2026 10:25 utc | 1122

A boy and girl in blue came around so I tickled the possum and cranked the monkey and still he would not pull out his gun. A bloody odd world.
Posted by: Peter AU1 | Feb 15 2026 5:07 utc | 1119
 
*********************
 
Peter, your methodology needs refining. Many great men have tried and failed, but Soapy found the secret by accident. You should read 
 
https://americanliterature.com/author/o-henry/short-story/the-cop-and-the-anthem
 
for a fool-proof method. I believe a similar principle was shown to work in The Shawshank Redemption

Posted by: General Factotum | Feb 15 2026 10:39 utc | 1123

Were ANY of Epstein’s victims Jewish?
Posted by: carlo | Feb 14 2026 23:32 utc | 1102

 
Chomsky, and surely a few others

Posted by: Avtonom | Feb 15 2026 12:34 utc | 1124

@ Avtonom | Feb 15 2026 12:34 utc | 1126
 
Nim Chimpsky’s namesake may have been a dupe, hut he was certainly not a victim.

Posted by: malenkov | Feb 15 2026 13:41 utc | 1125

@ Princess Bodica | Feb 15 2026 5:25 utc | 1122 and 1120
 
thanks for the additional ideas princess bodica! i have saved all of this in an e mail to myself in a folder for france.. i appreciate your help and ideas here.. thanks!

Posted by: james | Feb 15 2026 16:03 utc | 1126

@ General Factotum | Feb 15 2026 10:25 utc | 1124
 
thanks! i will include this in the notes as well.. 

Posted by: james | Feb 15 2026 16:04 utc | 1127

General Factotum | Feb 15 2026 10:39 utc | 1125
 
I was a bit past it at that stage. I had severe phosphorus deficiency. Completely undiagnosed for 18 years by either doctors or dentists. I had started blacking out whenever I pushed myself to do something and had lost all gut function. My family had decided I was just a lazy old drunk.
 
Auto immune disease is genetic. I used to worry that my children may have some genes that would make them susceptible to an auto immune condition. Now I hope they will have to live through what I have lived through.
 
With covid, the Australian government began funding research into autoimmune disease triggered by the virus and I though there may be some breakthroughs in the medical establishments understanding of autoimmune disease. But the government cut the funding after the first year.
 
All doctors are good for is flogging US big pharma snake oil. The Australian drugs regulatory body is 90% funded by the drug companies they are supposed to regulate. Pure corruption.
 
Medical research. Just another area the has been destroyed by the privatization and financialization of this class of people I know call the Epstein class.
Non US western governments used to put a lot of money into medical research. Now they don’t.
The CSIRO. That has done a lot of good scientific research in other areas in the past, but I think that is largely defunded now.
 
Right across the board in the western world is similar to Boeing. They stopped putting R&D into the next gen aircraft to increase short term profits. And now, because it is right across the board, the western world is going into collapse mode.

Posted by: Peter AU1 | Feb 15 2026 16:42 utc | 1128

A fitting ending to this site.
Off topic to derail this discussion.
Why implicate another in your demise???
Be a man and do it yourself.
Ziptie your hands behind your back, with a noose around your neck, and kick out the stepladder.
You’re bluster, not substance.
Coulda had your France discussion on the no Palestine/Ukraine thread.
You ain’t playin’ no one.

Posted by: $outhpaw | Feb 15 2026 22:39 utc | 1129

Obviously you are correct. But the sex-starved, female dominated masses are out for blood.

Posted by: 2026DarkAges | Feb 16 2026 0:11 utc | 1130

Indeed.
can we blame “them”???

Posted by: $outhpaw | Feb 16 2026 0:42 utc | 1131

The pervasive moral panic is crowding out facts, but Michael Tracey’s latest might help coax a few of those less far out on the limb back toward sanity: https://www.mtracey.net/p/viral-epstein-garbage-tweets
Perhaps considering some other cases of recent witch-hunting hysterias having nothing to do with Epstein might help a few more to find their better judgement:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNpnUGp1OcE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E-67XqY-MUo

Posted by: Norumbega | Feb 16 2026 1:15 utc | 1132

Trump, the Epstein Files & the Putrefaction of the American Oligarchy
 
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2026/02/11/xobm-f11.html
 
“…The release by the United States Department of Justice of more than 3 million pages of documents, thousands of videos, and hundreds of thousands of images relating to the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein is a major political event.
 
But its significance extends far beyond the sordid details of one man’s sexual predations, however monstrous those crimes were.
 
The Epstein files reveal the social physiognomy of a degenerate ruling class and oligarchial society in an advanced state of decomposition.
 
Their offenses are rank; They smell to heaven…”

Posted by: John Gilberts | Feb 16 2026 1:54 utc | 1133

Pedophiles of the world, unite!
b

Posted by: Augustine | Feb 16 2026 13:16 utc | 1134

https://nitter.poast.org/CDMorlock/status/2023123157004271628
 
 

Why Are People Shocked Chomsky Was Dreaming About The Island? (He was rich since the 80’s and was a HNWI)
Interesting that Chomsky’s net worth, if it was reported at $2 million in 2006, would likely be $10,000,000+ today. He was getting $12,000 a pop for 2 hour talks at universities back then (I went to one in 2002) – likely 3-4 times that recently; up until 2023.
The sheer business of talking Anarcho- syndicalism and promoting Anarchism above Marxism Leninism was a $$$$$ cash business, never realized how much it was worth though. No wonder Noam was on Epstein’s Island, he belonged there – he was an HNWI (an individual with a net worth including $1 million in fluid assets).
$300,000 a year from MIT for a salary, speaking gigs, books- it was a mini empire and Noam dreamed of a higher level, one with private jets, access to lavish apartments in Paris and Manhattan, the real high life.
He’d covertly worked to promote American Empire and dollar hegenomy all his life and after telling us to vote for the DNC for a decade he wanted to relax and live it up. I see zero contradictions here and if anything old Noam deserved it for all his hard work.
While the real ones like Parenti and Hudson (and many others) struggled to find jobs despite doing the exact same thing – Noam made the dollars, and he lived in the HNWI class whilst talking about what “socialism” should be.
Hoover institute wrote this article with the premise “Hey dude, you act and live like us (he probably made more than fucking Fukiyama, lol) and they were jealous.
Let that sink in: the top Neocon think tank leaders ragging on the top “leftist most important intellectual” of all time because he was making their grift look B grade.
Yes, it’s this bad in the west, welcome to the Fascist mode of Unproduction.

Posted by: Roland | Feb 16 2026 15:06 utc | 1135

Much to my amazement MOA “distinguished “ himself by advocating for lockdowns during the initial hysteria over COVID 1984. Fast forward 5 years or so and that declaration of fascistic support is made almost insignificant by what is a bizarre and highly offensive infomercial for one of the largest sex trafficking and money laundering conspiracies in American history that we know of. To argue about the definition of pedophilia as one of your main defenses against the voluminous evidence and testimony of at least dozens of victims while simultaneously siding with the feckless corruption of the FBI leaves me breathless. Time for another extended break from MOA in order to let the toxic stench of perverse logic slowly dissipate  
 

Posted by: Dark beloved cloud | Feb 16 2026 16:01 utc | 1136

changing the first word of the subject title from “smearing” to “defending”
would fix the OP.

Posted by: Not Ewe | Feb 16 2026 16:33 utc | 1137

Dead though this thread may be, I still think it worth mentioning that there’s a pretty good essay about Chomsky’s sucking up to power in today’s WSWS.

Posted by: malenkov | Feb 16 2026 22:39 utc | 1138

@ malenkov | Feb 16 2026 22:39 utc | 1140 with the  reverence to WSWS piece…thx
 
From that
 

The conventional treatment of the Epstein scandal in the bourgeois media focuses on the question of individual guilt. Which specific individuals committed crimes? Can prosecutions be brought? Is there a “client list”? These questions are important. But they are, in a fundamental sense, secondary. They should not obscure the more significant political question: What does the Epstein network reveal about the nature of the society that produced it?
It is not as though Epstein concealed his activities with great skill. He was convicted of sex crimes in 2008. He was a registered sex offender. And yet—and this is the essential point—the doors of elite society remained open to him. Universities continued to accept his money. Academics continued to attend his salons. Literary agent John Brockman continued to organize intellectual gatherings at which Epstein could mingle with scientists and technology executives. The entertainment publicist Peggy Siegal continued to invite him to private events. Harvard professors met with him in their offices. He was offered the use of apartments, invited to private islands, consulted on matters ranging from oil prices to dating.
In the world these people inhabit, wealth overrides all other considerations—including the sexual abuse of children. The moral universe of the American and international ruling class has been so thoroughly corroded by the worship of money that a convicted sex offender, provided he remained sufficiently rich and well-connected, could continue to function as a respected member of elite society. The Epstein case is not an aberration within this social milieu. It is its most concentrated and sordid expression.

Posted by: psychohistorian | Feb 17 2026 2:50 utc | 1139

B!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
 
from the files
 
“a 5 yo (!!!!!!) victim, several men spread her legs, she has bruises and blood all over her body, HER VAGINA IS GASHED AND A MAN INSERTS HIS HAND!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!”
 
FUCK YOU
FUCK YOU
FUCK YOU

Posted by: me-need-more-brain | Feb 18 2026 10:04 utc | 1140

lmfao holy shit dude, I didn’t expect you to start trusting the ruling class when it came to manipulating teens into having sex. Oh no see it’s all fine, they get paid for it, nothing bad about that! The courts only found him guilty on two charges! You know courts are never corrupt! I hope a teen girl cuts your dick off and force feeds it to you

Posted by: Tipepr | Feb 18 2026 11:18 utc | 1141

@ Tipepr
 
I like you !

Posted by: me-need-more-brain | Feb 18 2026 13:04 utc | 1142

The British Isles is turning into the British Paedophisles!
 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eC7gH91Aaoo
 
What’s really interesting is that when this special was first broadcast (and it would be just as ‘shocking’ now as then, perhaps more so) it was the Left that defended it and the Right that condemned it. Nowadays, on the whole, it would be the other way round. 
 
Moreover, in the 1990s, ideas that the ruling elite ‘ran huge p*dophile rings* and ‘murdered and ate babies’ at elite ‘rape islands’ was very much ‘right-coded’: it was the sort of thing that extreme right-wing US ‘militias’ believed, similarly to hysterical overestimation of the power and influence of the Israel lobby (‘Zionist Owned Government’ etc.). Nowadays, it’s the American Left that espouses these ideas, and the American Right that denies them. Yet another example of the US ‘left’ and the US ‘right’ swapping sides on extremely important issues and nobody noticing. 

Posted by: Hidari | Feb 18 2026 22:58 utc | 1143

Everyone seems to have given up on this thread and gone home which is probably no bad thing, but two more things to be said:
1: The Epstein Affair really does demonstrate that the alleged ‘scepticism’ that the left allegedly have about the corporate media is fake. When it comes to ‘sex scandals’ they believe everything they read in the tabloids. 
2: The ‘radical left’ are just as much ensnared by DNC and RNC created narratives as anyone else. 

Posted by: Hidari | Feb 20 2026 22:41 utc | 1144

Prince Andrew arrested. FBI files say he took part in torturing and raping a 6 year old girl along with G Maxwell. 
 
How is moonofalabama owner doing? Lol
 
An apology is due. Otherwise what a douche 

Posted by: Comandante | Feb 21 2026 14:29 utc | 1145

Posted by: Comandante | Feb 21 2026 14:29 utc | 1147
‘FBI files say he took part in torturing and raping a 6 year old girl along with G Maxwell. ‘
 
I will personally pay you a million pounds,…. actually, you know what? Make it 10 million pounds, out of my own pocket, if ‘Prince’ Andrew is arrested, tried, found guilty, and then sent to jail for life (or whatever) for the murder of a 6 year old girl or, for that matter, for the murder of anyone, anywhere, ever. 

Posted by: Hidari | Feb 21 2026 17:12 utc | 1146

Peter Mandelson arrested now. Of course, Mandelson is widely loathed in the Labour Party, and is one of the many Labor Party apparatchiks who has more enemies than friends. He has been arrested and may even do a few weeks or months in a low security jail (his ‘crimes’ seem quite minor) before returning to the cocktail party circuit (or perhaps pulling the strings more discretely from his manor now). Same with Andrew. Nothing could be further from the truth from thinking that this is some kind of ‘cleaning out the Augean stables’ situation, let alone a pre-revolutionary one. This is just typical ruling elite shenanigans, stabbing one of their own in the back ‘cos he got too big for his boots. Starmer (so far) seems stable, and as for the idea that Trump will be dragged down: dream on. That’s just yet another DNC fantasy like Russiagate.
The only possible repercussion in the UK of Epstein is to pave the way for a new Tory, possibly Farage PMship (or a coalition govt. of them both).  J.D. Vance still looks likely as the next US President. Nothing much will change, and, aside from The Usual Suspects, this will all be forgotten about in 40/50 year’s time. 

Posted by: Hidari | Feb 24 2026 7:21 utc | 1147