redpillproject/substack.com - Josh Reid
Taken from Josh Reid's substack dated 7/15/25
There’s a reason Trump hasn’t dumped the entire Epstein archive onto the public. It’s not because he’s protecting criminals. It’s because, in this kind of asymmetrical war, secrets are worth more than prosecutions.
Once you expose everything, the leverage evaporates. Once the kompromat becomes public, it loses its utility.
Ten reasons the Epstein files remain sealed:
Leverage
The files are a Trump card—pun intended. Once released, their value as a negotiation weapon vanishes.
Collateral Damage
Not everyone in Epstein’s orbit was a criminal. A mass dump would destroy innocent lives.
Victims, Not Just Perpetrators
Some people were coerced and threatened into compromise. Public exposure would retraumatize them.
Institutional Stability
Too many power brokers still occupy positions of influence. A full release could ignite chaos that outpaces any plan to rebuild.
Ongoing Investigations
Much of the evidence is tied to sealed indictments and active criminal probes. Dumping it preemptively would sabotage prosecutions.
National Security
Epstein was entangled with foreign intelligence. Mass disclosure risks revealing tradecraft, operations, and assets.
Civil Unrest
Names on those lists could spark riots, vigilantism, and social fracture on a scale we haven’t seen in modern America.
Legal Liability
Unproven claims would trigger a tsunami of lawsuits.
Negotiation Leverage
Those files have been used—quietly—to bend nations, corporations, and institutions to Trump’s agenda.
Interconnected Corruption
Releasing the evidence risks collapsing multiple systems at once without a replacement in place.
People still don’t grasp the scale of what Epstein really was.
@HunDriverWidow From what I've seen in life, people don't grasp much.
@DianaSez @HunDriverWidow i grasp boobies every chance I get.
@Phil @HunDriverWidow
Well, yeah, I guess there are some things many people grasp.