The Blindfold of Power: When the Law Bows to the Elite
The recent revelations regarding Jeffrey Epstein’s London operations confirm what cynics have long suspected: the law isn’t just blind; sometimes, it’s looking the other way on purpose. For years, Epstein operated four luxury apartments in Kensington and Chelsea—essentially private hubs for human trafficking. While young women were being ferried across borders via the Eurostar like disposable cargo, the Metropolitan Police sat on their hands. It wasn't a lack of evidence; it was a lack of appetite to challenge the "untouchables."
From a David Morris-inspired perspective, this is the "alpha male" hierarchy at its most toxic. In any primate group, the dominant males often enjoy a different set of rules, supported by a network of subordinates who benefit from the status quo. Epstein didn't just buy women; he bought silence and social capital. By hosting the powerful, he created a mutual insurance policy of shared guilt. The police didn't "fail" to investigate—they calculated the risk of investigating someone with friends in high places and decided that the safety of nameless foreign girls wasn't worth the professional suicide.
The business model of Epstein’s ring was brilliantly, darkly efficient. He used victims to recruit victims, turning the oppressed into unwilling cogs in his machine. This is a classic historical tactic used by regimes and cartels alike: break the moral compass of the victim to ensure their complicity. The fact that the FBI and UK authorities saw the money trails—the massive "allowances" paid to young girls—and did nothing is a testament to the darker side of human nature. We are a species that respects power more than justice. The "public inquiry" being called for now is just a standard ritual of institutional penance—a way to pretend we are shocked by a darkness that was hiding in plain sight for decades.