NHacker Next
  • new
  • past
  • show
  • ask
  • show
  • jobs
  • submit
A graph explorer of the Epstein emails (epstein-doc-explorer-1.onrender.com)
pickpuck 19 days ago [-]
What if we extended this idea beyond one dataset to all discrete news events and entities: people, organizations, places.

Just like here you could get a timeline of key events, a graph of connected entities, links to original documents.

Newsrooms might already do this internally idk.

This code might work as a foundation. I love that it's RDF.

VikingCoder 19 days ago [-]
Sci-Fi Author: In my book I invented the Torment Nexus as a cautionary tale

Tech Company: At long last, we have created the Torment Nexus from classic sci-fi novel Don't Create The Torment Nexus

darth_aardvark 17 days ago [-]
Palantir, arguably the closest thing to Torment Nexus Inc. IRL, literally builds a product that does this.
throwaway290 18 days ago [-]
...and of course it's in RDF!
jandrewrogers 19 days ago [-]
This has been attempted many times. They all fail the same way.

These general data models start to become useful and interesting at around a trillion edges, give or take an order of magnitude. A mature graph model would be at least a few orders of magnitude larger, even if you aggressively curated what went into it. This is a simple consequence of the cardinality of the different kinds of entities that are included in most useful models.

No system described in open source can get anywhere close to even the base case of a trillion edges. They will suffer serious scaling and performance issues long before they get to that point. It is a famously non-trivial computer science problem and much of the serious R&D was not done in public historically.

This is why you only see toy or narrowly focused graph data models instead of a giant graph of All The Things. It would be cool to have something like this but that entails some hardcore deep tech R&D.

michelpp 19 days ago [-]
There are open source projects moving toward this scale, the GraphBLAS for example uses an algebraic formulation over compressed sparse matrix representations for graphs that is designed to be portable across many architectures, including cuda. It would be nice if companies like nivida could get more behind our efforts, as our main bottleneck is development hardware access.

To plug my project, I've wrapped the SuiteSparse GraphBLAS library in a postgres extension [1] that fluidly blends algebraic graph theory with the relational model, the main flow is to use sql to structure complex queries for starting points, and then use the graphblas to flow through the graph to the endpoints, then joining back to tables to get the relevant metadata. On cheap hetzner hardware (amd epyc 64 core) we've achieved 7 billion edges per second BFS over the largest graphs in the suitesparse collection (~10B edges). With our cuda support we hope to push that kind of performance into graphs with trillions of edges.

[1] https://github.com/OneSparse/OneSparse

babelfish 19 days ago [-]
I don't have any experience on graph modeling, but it seems like Neo4j should be able to support 1 trillion edges, based on this (admittedly marketing) post of theirs? https://neo4j.com/press-releases/neo4j-scales-trillion-plus-...
jandrewrogers 19 days ago [-]
The graph database market has a deserved reputation for carefully crafting scaling claims that are so narrowly qualified as to be inapplicable to anything real. If you aren't deep into the tech you'll likely miss it in the press releases. It is an industry-wide problem, I'm not trying to single out Neo4j here.

Using this press release as an example, if you pay attention to the details you'll notice that this graph has an anomalously low degree. That is, the graph is very weakly connected, lots of nodes and barely any edges. Typical graph data models have much higher connectivity than this. For example, the classic Graph500 benchmark uses an average degree of 16 to measure scale-out performance.

So why did they nerf the graph connectivity? One of the most fundamental challenges in scaling graphs is optimally cutting them into shards. Unlike most data models, no matter how you cut up the graph some edges will always span multiple shards, which becomes a nasty consistency problem in scale-out systems. Scaling this becomes exponentially harder the more highly connected the graph. So basically, they defined away the problem that makes graphs difficult to scale. They used a graph so weakly connected that they could kinda sorta make it work on a thousand(!) machines even though it is not representative of most real-world graph data models.

babelfish 18 days ago [-]
Thanks for taking the time to respond! Inspired me to go read the Facebook TAO paper.
stevage 19 days ago [-]
>These general data models start to become useful and interesting at around a trillion edges

That is a wild claim. Perhaps for some very specific definition of "useful and interesting"? This dataset is already interesting (hard to say whether it's useful) at a much tinier scale.

jandrewrogers 19 days ago [-]
It was a widely observed heuristic going back to the days when the Semantic Web was trendy. The underlying reason is also obvious once stated.

Almost every non-trivial graph data model about the world is a graph of human relationships in the population. If not directly then by proxy. Population scale human relationship graphs commonly pencil out at roughly 1T edges, a function of the population size. It is also typically the highest cardinality entity. Even the purpose isn’t a human relationship graph, they all tend to have one tacitly embedded with the scale implied.

If you restrict the set of human entities, you either end up with big holes in the graph or it is a graph that is not generally interesting (like one limited to company employees).

The OP was talking about generalizing this to a graph of people, places, events, and organizations, which always has this property.

It is similar to the phenomenon that a vast number of seemingly unrelated statistics are almost perfectly correlated with GDP.

zozbot234 19 days ago [-]
This is not a "general purpose data model", though. A better example would be Wikidata which at about 100M nodes and 1B edges (so orders of magnitude less than that 1T claim) is already enabling plenty of useful queries about all sorts of publicly-available data and entities.
mmooss 19 days ago [-]
> It is a famously non-trivial computer science problem and much of the serious R&D was not done in public historically.

Could you point us to any public research on this issue? Or the history of the proprietary research? Just the names might help - maybe there are news articles, it's a section in someone's book, etc.

theteapot 19 days ago [-]
> It would be cool to have something like this ..

Aren't LLMs something like this?

djtango 19 days ago [-]
An LLM probabilistically produces tokens over its model which is why it can hallucinate whilst an actual graph model would not have that issue
afavour 19 days ago [-]
The New York Times has an API that lets you query “tags” or “topics” and the articles associated with them:

https://developer.nytimes.com/docs/semantic-api-product/1/ov...

The Guardian has similar:

https://open-platform.theguardian.com/documentation/tag

Either or both could be an interesting starting point for something like that. I tried to find something for the BBC and was surprised they didn’t have anything. I would have figured public media would have been a great resource for this.

pjc50 19 days ago [-]
Someone did one for (a small subset of) UK media. People were furious. https://brokenbottleboy.substack.com/p/mapped-out
ggm 19 days ago [-]
Given 6 degrees is rooted in reality, this means we can draw causal graphs from anyone (bad) to anyone (we don't like) and then invent specious reasons why it means "it's all connected, man"

That said, some networks of shorter paths than 6 are interesting. Right now, there's a 1:1 direct path from these documents to a bunch of people with an interest in confounding what evidentiary value they have in justice processes. That's more interesting to me, than what the documents say right now.

johongo 19 days ago [-]
Emil Eifrem (founder of Neo4j) has a talk about them doing this with the Panama papers
Centigonal 19 days ago [-]
pbronez 19 days ago [-]
Yup, this is a fantastic project and probably the most mature attempt at a global knowledge graph for contemporary news.
scotty79 19 days ago [-]
300 categories, 60 attributes ... Doesn't sound very high res.
FanaHOVA 19 days ago [-]
One co trying: https://www.system.com
j-pb 19 days ago [-]
If it's RDF it won't work as the foundation.
axus 19 days ago [-]
One wonders what the US government agencies use.
PaulHoule 19 days ago [-]
Isn’t that what Palantir’s product is?
sswaner 19 days ago [-]
Pretty much, at least at the semantic layer. https://publish.obsidian.md/followtheidea/Content/AI/Ontolog...
cjohnson318 19 days ago [-]
They probably use Excel, maybe Microsoft Access.
ToucanLoucan 19 days ago [-]
Microsoft Access form that connects via IIS to an Excel spreadsheet acting as a database. Also the server it's running on is sitting on a wooden table.
cjohnson318 18 days ago [-]
Bro you can't just leak operational secrets on the world wide information highway like this.
arthurcolle 19 days ago [-]
Probably not particularly useful but GCHQ & NSA both have neat graph related repos

UK: https://github.com/gchq/Gaffer

US: https://github.com/NationalSecurityAgency/lemongraph

dboreham 19 days ago [-]
Internet search engines have their origins in government projects fwiw. They had search engines before Alta Vista, used for searching data sets that pre-date the internet, and some of the people involved in those went to work on the original commercial search engines.
abnercoimbre 19 days ago [-]
I think you meant one shudders. And yeah, Snowden made it clear there's orders of magnitude more data than this graph explorer for them to sift through.
fancy_pantser 19 days ago [-]
Software like i2 Analyst's Notebook.
ChrisMarshallNY 19 days ago [-]
Oh Cthulhu, this is like a periscope into a septic tank...
bamboozled 19 days ago [-]
Yes almost no one has been held accountable for any of it, "weird"?
rich_sasha 19 days ago [-]
As "The Rest Is Politics" podcasts points out, the meagre consequences mostly came to Brits: Ghislaine Maxwell, Prince Andrew aka Andrew Mountbatten, and the former UK embassador to the US.

Americans..?

pjc50 19 days ago [-]
Mandelson will probably rise again. After all, he survived the (consequences of) the Iraq war. Note that he got the job without an interview: https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cglg63n63wdo
scotty79 19 days ago [-]
Americans don't really do accountability all that much. People there who get to face the consequences are usually the ones that significantly harmed the financial interests of the very rich. Madoff, Holmes, Bankman. They operate more on a vengance than accountability system.
Y_Y 19 days ago [-]
What accountability would you suggest?
octoberfranklin 19 days ago [-]
Prison?
gruez 19 days ago [-]
We're going to send people to jail based purely on hearsay from Epstein or his affiliates?
wredcoll 19 days ago [-]
What about... investigations...
gruez 19 days ago [-]
If the evidence is strong enough, sure. But as much as I like a "the elites are pedophiles" witchhunt, given that the Biden administration sat on it, it's probably safe to conclude the evidence isn't great. The Trump administration is trying to get another wack at it, but given their recent history of investigations, it's probably safe to conclude that's purely politically motivated than some cold case that got cracked.
thrance 19 days ago [-]
The Biden administration sat on many thing, their total passiveness is no indication of anything. After all, they let the Jan 6 coup attempt go by with nothing but a strongly-worded speech that no one listened to. At this point, there is zero doubt remaining that Trump is indeed a pedophile and a rapist, just click on his node in TFA and read all we know about him. If that is not enough to get him actually convicted, then this country is truly and utterly fucked, and there's nothing to do but to wait for it to crumble under the weight of its own stupidity and corruption.
names_are_hard 19 days ago [-]
Eternal shame and public oppobrium. At minimum, elected officials connected with impropriety should step down, and the public should be so disgusted that they have no hope of ever serving in public office again.
pjc50 19 days ago [-]
Not really, given that anyone who might hold them accountable is also in the graph somewhere.

It is very funny that the "unaccountability shield" stops at the US border, though, so it's taken out Prince Andrew.

bamboozled 19 days ago [-]
Shouldn't he be in jail? I wouldn't say it's taken him out ?
pjc50 19 days ago [-]
"Should", maybe, but given that the witness is dead no reasonable prospect of a conviction, regardless of the aggravating factors of it being hard to secure a conviction for someone famous, or for so long after the event. He's losing a lot of money and seems to be being cut off by his family, at least.
throwaway290 18 days ago [-]
how is being in this graph bad or preventing accountability?

there's Obama in there only because related to Trump via "invited to White House lunch", now he is part of septic tank?

boogheta 19 days ago [-]
It's a bit too bad that the network visualisation relies on d3: it is really slow with big networks, and the force directed algorithm is far from the best. Have you tried using JS libraries built specifically to visualise graph networks such as Sigma.js, Vivagraph or Cytoscape?
tootyskooty 19 days ago [-]
Shameless plug: if OP is looking to stay on d3, he could also try slotting in my C++/WASM versions[1] of the main d3 many-body forces. Not the best, but I've found >3x speedup using these for periplus.app :)

[^1]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/d3-manybody-wasm

marginalia_nu 19 days ago [-]
What do you have to run to use this thing?

I have a 4090 and 32 GB of RAM and this thing is chugging at like 2 FPS, with the UI being completely unresponsive.

claiir 17 days ago [-]
Javascript doesn’t generally execute on your GPU.
marginalia_nu 16 days ago [-]
Website rendering does.
17 days ago [-]
liotier 19 days ago [-]
"Brad Edwards" and "Bradley Edwards" might be the same individual.
tovej 19 days ago [-]
Yes, the dataset also has three entries for Virginia Giuffre, "Virginia L. Giuffre", "Virginia Roberts Giuffre", and "Jane Doe Number 3 (Virginia Roberts)"
adolph 19 days ago [-]
I read a recent observation that people subject to discovery are often making purposeful typos in key names in order for the communication to remain under the radar.
potato3732842 19 days ago [-]
Everyone is potentially subject to discovery. Some people are just more aware of it.
GuinansEyebrows 19 days ago [-]
Likewise for instances of "Larry" and "Lawrence" Summers... probably a lot of those.
DrewADesign 19 days ago [-]
I’m sure some developer/archivist is working on a name authority as we speak.
cyrusradfar 19 days ago [-]
great use case for using AI to suggest mergers and clean up.
specproc 19 days ago [-]
LLMs are awful for this. I've got a project that's doing structured extraction and half the work is deduplication.

I didn't go down the route of LLMs for the clean up, as you're getting into scale and context issues with larger datasets.

I got into semantic similarity networks for this use case. You can do efficient pairwise matching with Annoy, set a cutoff threshold, and your isolated subgraphs are merger candidates.

I wrapped up my code in a little library if you're into this sort of thing.

github.com/specialprocedures/semnet

mvATM99 19 days ago [-]
Nice looking library! Might try it for one of my own projects.
jrochkind1 19 days ago [-]
Why are they all moving, what does the time axis represent?
alhadrad 19 days ago [-]
Its because the layout system has also a physics system.
piyh 19 days ago [-]
>A force-directed graph is a technique for visualizing networks where nodes are treated like physical objects with forces acting between them to create a stable arrangement. Attractive forces (like springs) pull connected nodes together, while repulsive forces (like electric charges) push all nodes apart, resulting in a layout where connected nodes are closer and unconnected nodes are more separated

https://observablehq.com/@d3/force-directed-graph/2

oskarkk 19 days ago [-]
I think it would be better and faster if the website calculated the positions of the nodes in the background (with a good enough limit of iterations), and then showed the result. Animating 4k nodes and 25k edges (15k by default) is a waste of CPU and is laggy even on my high-end CPU. But maybe the author was limited by the tools used.
bfkwlfkjf 19 days ago [-]
Anybody else enjoying the fact that maga manufactured this outrage and now it's being turned against them?
Danjoe4 19 days ago [-]
If you look at this graph and your prescient thought is "haha take that MAGA" then you are a brainwashed ideologue. This graph gives a window into the layers of rot in our political system. The complexity is perfectly represented by its form but it seems like your graph is just a big arrow that says "orange man bad".
pjc50 19 days ago [-]
He is, and so are a very large number of people associated with him.

That is not an exhaustive list. But people who want things to improve should also shut down their ability to confect scandals or distractions, like the "Obama tan suit" controversy. Once Americans have a reasonable selection of non-insane non-compromised candidates, things may get better. The election of Mamdani is a good start in that direction, because all the other (D) candidates were horribly compromised.

dontlaugh 18 days ago [-]
Indeed, the actual controversy with Obama should’ve been all of the war crimes.
pjc50 18 days ago [-]
Like the Iraq war, those had very strong bipartisan support.
bfkwlfkjf 18 days ago [-]
Orange man bad.
Ms-J 19 days ago [-]
This is great work to show relationship and connections. The government gets scared from these types of efforts as there are many members who are extremely guilty of crimes related to this and others.

We need to expand on network mapping with data and areas as well.

yndoendo 19 days ago [-]
After seen this I interested in a map of each person to assist with knowing who they are, who they worked for during the email date, and who they currently work for.
19 days ago [-]
19 days ago [-]
ivape 19 days ago [-]
I’m curious which LLM tools actually handled all 23k emails well.
zeld4 19 days ago [-]
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
This is the best rendition I've seen so far.

The Bill Clinton entity is interesting.

> 2009: Bill Clinton discontinued association with Jeffrey Epstein

> 2010: Jeffrey Epstein provided flights on jets to Bill Clinton

> 2010-2011: Jeffrey Epstein traveled via private aircraft with Bill Clinton

> 2011: Ghislaine Maxwell piloted helicopter for Bill Clinton

> 2014: Bill Clinton alleged presence at sex parties

> 2015: Bill Clinton distanced relationship from Jeffrey Epstein

Wasn't very good at discontinuing the relationship it seems.

Guess there is precedent for him lying about sexual activities though.

I think a sentiment analysis between the friendliness and social meetups between Epstein and other individuals would be useful.

Who were his friends after 2008 when he was first convicted?

Those who were still friends with him after 2008 were in on it or guilty by association, if not legally, socially.

Friends like Reid Hoffman and Larry Summers...

> From: Reid Hoffman

> Sent: 7/6/2015 5:04:31 PM

> To: jeffrey E. [jeeyacation@gmail.com]

> Subject: RE: ICYMI

> slow progress.

> planning to see you in August.

> Hope you're well.

Larry Summers has too many to list. Doesn't look good though digging through them.

beepbooptheory 19 days ago [-]
This obviously the correct lens but note that the 2008 plea deal was so neutered by the time of settlement it made it somewhat easy to stay friends with him.

This is of course ontop of the 2006 Florida prostitution charge though.

theultdev 19 days ago [-]
Especially when Epstein was paying off journalists at the NYT and intimidating other outlets.

But point being those people that were friends with him had to know. Whether it was socially acceptable by the elite because the public wasn't aware isn't very relevant.

19 days ago [-]
19 days ago [-]
octoberfranklin 19 days ago [-]
> Wasn't very good at discontinuing the relationship it seems.

Keep in mind that those summaries are AI-generated. There's gonna be a lot of confabulating in there.

theultdev 19 days ago [-]
Yes, but the the summaries generated are referenced with sources.

Care to dispute the summaries using the sources?

octoberfranklin 19 days ago [-]
Confabulators gonna confabulate.
godelski 19 days ago [-]
I read the gp as saying you should just check the sources, not defending.

I mean here's a weird example. Searching Donald Trump there's the headline

  (1994-06 Wexner Mansion NYC) 
  Donald Trump forced to perform oral sex and physically abused 13-year-old female plaintiff and 12-year-old female. 
Like that sounds weird... DT forced to rape? That doesn't make sense to me. The longer summary reads

  A declaration from Tiffany Doe (pseudonym) testifying that she witnessed Jeffrey Epstein and Donald Trump sexually abuse a 13-year-old girl and other minors during parties from 1990-2000 in New York City. 
It references House Oversight 025937. The actual document looks much more like that summary. Here's a snippet

  7. It was at these series of parties that I personally witnessed the Plaintiff being forced to perform various sexual acts with Donald J. Trump and Mr. Epstein. Both Mr. Trump and Mr. Epstein were advised that she was 13 years old.
It gets worse so if you want to look further it's Case 1:16-cv-04642 Document 1-2 Filed 06/20/16 Page 1 of 2.

So far the paragraph summaries seem to be accurate in my poking around but the headlines are mixing ordering and have other weird errors like this. Anyways, always good to check when things are as serious as this...

Here's the link: https://drive.google.com/file/d/11KzAOYCjxwEhnyrsiBpKM8OGBJp...

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
Note that this document is from an anonymous lawsuit that was withdrawn and never substantiated or corroborated.
godelski 19 days ago [-]
Also note that

  13. I personally witnessed Mr. Epstein physically threaten the life and well-being of the Plaintiff if she ever revealed the details of the physical and sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of Mr. Epstein or any of his guests. 
  14. I personally witnessed Defendant Trump telling the Plaintiff that she shouldn't ever say anything if she didn't want to disappear like the 12-year-old female Maria, and that he was capable of having her whole family killed. 
  15. After leaving the employment of Mr. Epstein in the year 2000, I was personally threatened by Mr. Epstein that I would be killed and my family killed as well if I ever disclosed any of the physical and sexual abuse of minor females that I had personally witnessed by Mr. Epstein or any of his guests.
Doesn't make it true but this seems to be consistent across different accounts and serves as a possible explanation to your note as well as why so many people might have quiet for so long.
rayiner 19 days ago [-]
Epstein was tried and convicted based on a mountain and documentary evidence and there was never even an allegation that he did anything like that.
godelski 18 days ago [-]
I think it is less about if he actually made any hits on people but rather that the threat existed. The question is not "has such threats been followed through" but "does the person being threatened have a reasonable belief that the threat is legitimate."

To that, I think the answer is an unambiguous "yes". If someone who is rich, well connected, and successfully covering up heinous crimes at a large scale, then yes, I believe a person threatened has a reasonable belief that such a threat is credible.

Seriously, we are talking about a world famous pedo who was pimping out girls to presidents, royals, billionaires, and when he was finally convicted he was only charged with prostitution and got a extremely light sentence that everyone now calls a "sweetheart deal." So years after does a witness have a credible belief that such a man can post a significant threat to her and her family?

Do you seriously believe that no person has any reason to fear Epstein? I find that laughable considering how much conspiracy there is about him being murdered and how the accusations are towards varying high profile people. You're trying to say that Epstein is a puppy dog that's all bark and no bite?

I agree, nothing is proven but it's absolutely laughable to claim that such a threat is not credible.

Why are you defending a pedo?

anonnon 19 days ago [-]
> The Bill Clinton entity is interesting.

Not really. After Epstein got convicted in 2008, he set about trying to rehabilitate his image, to be seen as a philanthropist, a patron of science, and (perversely) a supporter of women and girls. He hired reputation management consultants to help carry out the project, with one of the models they used being Mike Milken (of Drexel infamy), who ultimately secured a pardon from Trump. A lot of prominent people, knowingly or not, served as "useful idiots" in this project, often due to financial incentives that were not wholly selfish. For example, the MIT and Harvard scientists whose labs and research he funded, and who visited his island for science-themed retreats. Clinton was probably another of Epstein's useful idiots, being lured in through his Clinton Global Initiative and the promise that Epstein, with his ample wealth, could help greatly expand it.

anonnon 19 days ago [-]
> For example, the MIT and Harvard scientists whose labs and research he funded, and who visited his island for science-themed retreats.

I should add that at least one of them, Marvin Minsky, was accused by name by the late Virginia Giuffre.

tinyplanets 19 days ago [-]
[flagged]
bamboozled 19 days ago [-]
Seems to get away with it all, meanwhile, we all pay our taxes, don't break any laws and just be "good people".
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
Of course, deflect discussion to Trump. Does that make any of those other people look better to you?

Trump gave information against Epstein in 2009 and unlike Bill and others did cut ties after learning he was poaching girls from Mar-a-Lago.

I specifically made the point to look into those who were friends with Epstein even after knowing what he was doing.

Nice whataboutism though. Feel free to reference source materials to support your claims.

Btw are you a bot or is that just a canned statement you use?

hiccuphippo 19 days ago [-]
Well for one those other people are not the current president of the most powerful country in the world.

But sure, lock all of them up, just don't ignore a few because they are too powerful.

JumpCrisscross 19 days ago [-]
It’s been wild to see people subsume not defending child rapists to their partisan identity.

I’m still convinced it’s a minority of loud voices online and on social media.

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
[flagged]
pjc50 19 days ago [-]
> Russiagate

A significant number of Trump associates actually went to jail for Russia-related business, and I don't think it's been entirely ruled out for himself. Of course, it has not yet been proven either and I doubt it will be in his lifetime.

ben_w 19 days ago [-]
You're proving the point here.

You don't need to trust the media or care about his views on immigration to know that the guy got 34 felony convictions (for attempting to cover up mere infidelity with a porn star), that he's lost a lawsuit regarding sexual assault claims, and that sexual assault claims against him go back to the 70s and involving at least 28 women and him walking in on naked teenage pageant contestants.

Then there's the non-sexual stuff. If you want to say it's "shady" being twice impeached, or hanging his own arrest photo next to the oval office, or the huge number of business lawsuits, or the way he's now able to sue himself and win, or that he's now pardoning convicted co-conspirators etc., that's on you: as the quote goes, democracy is the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.

The possibility of pee tapes was funny, but did anyone really care if golden shower was a liquid reference or a "24 carat (plated)" like his redecoration of the oval office?

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
[flagged]
ben_w 19 days ago [-]
> Show me where it’s a felony to use your own money to cover up an affair?

The "falsified business records" bit, for which he was convicted under felony charges. Those bits, where he was convicted as a felon, are what makes it a felony.

Likewise, it wasn't a crime for Bill Clinton to have an affair with any of the White House interns (AFAICT Paula Jones was before then), but then Clinton went and lied about affairs under oath, which was.

There's a reason why I put emphasis on "mere infidelity".

> My esteemed colleagues in the bar would be outraged if a legal theory half as aggressively creative as this one was brought against a gang murderer. They would leap at the chance to handle the appeals pro bono.

The fact he was convicted says otherwise on the first part, and the observation that he's still having trouble getting competent lawyers to defend him even now he's back in office speaks poorly of either your esteemed colleagues or of your estimation of them.

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
[flagged]
razakel 19 days ago [-]
>But they turned up their nose at representing Trump because he doesn’t subscribe to their religion.

Of course, it couldn't possibly have anything to do with his habit of refusing to pay.

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
That’s a good reason, but it wasn’t their stated reasons.
JumpCrisscross 19 days ago [-]
> what fundamentally differentiates people who simply don’t like Trump for all the legitimate reasons to dislike Trump from the people who go full blown Rachel Maddow is deep-seated liberal universalism

You should know this isn’t me.

I was honestly optimistic for this Presidency. The corruption and lawlessness were annoying. But the masked ICE agents openly defying the law struck a nerve. And now we’re seeing folks like Megyn Kelly advocate for dismissing child rape.

That Trump is acting guilty, and has taken this from a fringe conspiracy theory to something worth considering, is almost besides the point. My condemnation is of the partisan dismissal of the crime per se, not Trump’s involvement.

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
> But the masked ICE agents openly defying the law struck a nerve.

The ICE agents are masked because people think they can violently interfere with federal law enforcement. People voted for the guy that promised mass deportations, and the government is entitled to carry out that policy and respond to violent resistance to those operations.

Nobody is “dismissing” Epstein’s crimes. Megyn is reacting to people trying to smear Trump as a “child rapist” and “pedophile” based on zero evidence.

throwaway290 18 days ago [-]
> The ICE agents are masked because people think they can violently interfere with federal law enforcement

Actually it is wearing masks interferes with legal law enforcement. You know how we know, because FBI told ICE that. Because now anyone can wear a mask and pretend to be ice to kidnap people. That really interferes with law enforcement man

JumpCrisscross 18 days ago [-]
> ICE agents are masked because people think they can violently interfere with federal law enforcement

Not a problem for all other law enforcement. The precedent being set--that masked men can disappear people from the street--is dangerous and un-American.

> People voted for the guy that promised mass deportations, and the government is entitled to carry out that policy and respond to violent resistance to those operations

Sure. None of this requires a mask.

Also, the only injuries ICE officers have suffered have been due to e.g. being dragged by a car [1]. None have been due to someone tracking them down ex post facto.

> Megyn is reacting to people trying to smear Trump as a “child rapist” and “pedophile” based on zero evidence

She argued Jeffrey Epstein is not technically a pedophile. (A defense she similarly mounts with zero evidence.) She described a 15-year old as "barely legal," which is nonsense and disgusting and deeply unsettling given she literally has a daughter around that age.

And until now, Trump has been going out of his way to block the government from fulfilling his campaign promise around the Epstein files. (After his AG lied that they don't exist.) As a result, it took Democrats in the Congress releasing the e-mails to get Larry Summers to step down [2].

[1] https://www.dhs.gov/news/2025/09/12/dhs-statement-ice-office...

[2] https://apnews.com/article/larry-summers-jeffrey-epstein-ema...

theultdev 19 days ago [-]
Sure. What evidence would you like to use to lock Trump up?

Point to an email in this dump or anything else.

It's clear as day Trump cut ties when he found out who he was and was against him.

Not so much for others.

wredcoll 19 days ago [-]
> cut ties after learning he was poaching girls from Mar-a-Lago.

This is, uh, not the slam dunk you seem to think it is.

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
Yes it is. Trump cut ties because Epstein was poaching employees. That was confirmed by the employee in question, Virginia Giuffre, who always maintained that she was a normal masseuse at Mar-a-Lago: https://abcnews.go.com/US/virginia-giuffre-trump-jeffrey-eps...
Zigurd 19 days ago [-]
You swallowed "Trump cut ties" whole, on a thread discussing messages that prove that wasn't the case. Wow. If I'm ever accused of dozens of felonious depravities I'mma call you.
rayiner 19 days ago [-]
I wrote “cut ties” because that’s the wording used by the post I was responding to. My point is to respond to the innuendo that Guiffre was providing some sort of sexual services at Mar-a-Lago when she consistently maintained that Trump wasn’t involved in anything like that. Please point me to the email that “proves that wasn’t the case.”
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
> on a thread discussing messages that prove that wasn't the case

Point to the messages that proves that wasn't the case.

godelski 19 days ago [-]

  > It's clear as day Trump cut ties when he found out who he was and was against him.
Really? I'm very much under the impression that Trump knew exactly who Epstein was.

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45961278

19 days ago [-]
19 days ago [-]
crystal_revenge 19 days ago [-]
What I don't understand is the pretense of defending Trump at all. I mean, it's clear that even if you watched Trump assault a 13 year old with your own eyes, it wouldn't impact your support for him. Why pretend that there is some moral divide between Bill Clinton and Donald Trump in this when you can just say "I support Donald Trump no matter what, and despite Bill Clinton no matter what"?

Personally I've never been shocked that some of the most powerful people in the world like to go to a private sex-island where they could do as they pleased. That's precisely the incentive to becoming so incredibly powerful in the first place: to be able to pursue personal gain with increasingly less consequences.

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
> What I don't understand is the pretense of defending Trump at all.

Because every story eventually collapses into a fraction of the original allegation: https://abcnews.go.com/US/virginia-giuffre-trump-jeffrey-eps...

toyg 19 days ago [-]
Clinton at least has not been in office for 25 years. Trump is still in office. Surely the priority should be to get the bad people out of institutions asap...?
protocolture 19 days ago [-]
>Of course, deflect discussion to Trump

Interesting attempted deflection away from Trump.

timeon 19 days ago [-]
> Trump gave information against Epstein in 2009

Pre-2009 records on Trump there are nasty. One example:

> ... It was at these series of parties that I personally witnessed the Plaintiff being forced to perform various sexual acts with Donald J. Trump and Mr. Epstein. Both Mr. Trump and Mr. Epstein were advised that she was 13 years old. I personally witnessed four sexual encounters that the Plaintiff was forced to have with Mr. Trump during this period, including the fourth of these encounters where Mr. Trump forcibly raped her despite her pleas to stop.

Only difference between Clinton and Trump is that Trump is still president.

19 days ago [-]
sanktanglia 19 days ago [-]
Trump was with Epstein in 2017, he didn't cut ties at all
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
That's a lie that has already been proven false since Trump's entire trip was documented.

Love how we have actual evidence against people but discussions always devolve into some conspiracy related to Trump.

----

Based on the available evidence, there is no confirmed meeting between Trump and Epstein in 2017. While both men were in Palm Beach during Thanksgiving week 2017, there is no direct evidence they met.

Here's what we know about their presence in Palm Beach that week:

- Trump was at Mar-a-Lago from November 21-26, 2017

- Epstein owned a mansion in Palm Beach and was known to be in the area

- Epstein mentioned both Trump and himself being "down there" (Palm Beach) in an email exchange on November 23, 2017

While there were claims circulating online that Trump spent Thanksgiving with Epstein in 2017, these claims have been thoroughly investigated and found to be unsubstantiated

Trump's official calendar for that week shows his activities included:

- Thanking military members on a virtual call

- Visiting Coast Guard members at Lake Worth Inlet Station

- Playing golf with Tiger Woods and Dustin Johnson

protocolture 19 days ago [-]
>Trump's official calendar for that week shows his activities included:

Damn, Trump would have 100% listed his sex crimes on his official calendar. Case closed.

theultdev 19 days ago [-]
Yeah it's most likely he snuck out from the SS and had thanksgiving with a pedo while president. /s

No reason to talk about anyone who actually corresponded with Epstein I guess.

protocolture 19 days ago [-]
Plenty of reason. Nab everyone. But deflecting criticism from the pedo in chief is a weird look.
throwaway290 18 days ago [-]
> he snuck out from the SS and had thanksgiving with a pedo

we don't know he didn't... at best we can know what he did in daylight when journos were around. the rest we can find only if SS is subpoenaed

phatfish 19 days ago [-]
Thanks ChatGPT.
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
This entire thread is about AI generated content from emails.

But we are human, so we can verify sources collected by AI. Care to dispute anything?

culi 19 days ago [-]
Even if Trump cut off ties with Epstein in 2017, he should clearly be held accountable for his past actions. Here's 2 pretty damning emails:

---

Epstein to Maxwell 2011-04-02

> i want you to realize that that dog that hasn’t barked is trump... [VICTIM] spent hours at my house with him ,, he has never once been mentioned. police chief. etc. im 75% there

---

Epstein to Ruemmler 2018-08-23

> you see, i know how dirty donald is. my guess is that non lawyers ny biz people have no idea. what it means to have your fixer flip

gruez 19 days ago [-]
>Here's 2 pretty damning emails:

The most "damning" emails are hearsay from other people?

rayiner 19 days ago [-]
What do those emails prove?

Do you know who the reduction “[VICTIM]” is referring to? It’s Virginia Guiffre: https://abcnews.go.com/US/virginia-giuffre-trump-jeffrey-eps.... What did Guiffre testify about Trump?

theultdev 19 days ago [-]
[flagged]
pohl 19 days ago [-]
Could you explain how “no confirmed meeting” implies “they never met”?
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
You think he snuck out from secret service and had an off-the-book thanksgiving with a pedo?

I'm saying there's no direct evidence he did and on face value it's ridiculous.

He was meeting the troops and golfing with Tiger Woods and happened to be in the same state Epstein had a house in.

Have any evidence otherwise, or just conspiracy theories?

pohl 19 days ago [-]
With any other administration I would have granted you that leap in logic, but we already learned, three years ago, from Stephanie Grisham that he held off the books meetings specifically to circumvent record keeping laws. So I think a slightly higher standard of evidence is needed before we dismiss the possibility that he met with the pedo who likely had dirt on him.
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
You have the standard of evidence reversed.

You need to prove what you're accusing him of, not the other way around.

pohl 19 days ago [-]
Sounds like you’re assuming that standards for charges/trial should also be used as standards for inquiry/investigation. That is not the case.
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
By all means investigate away on the thanksgiving email, you will find nothing as nothing exists.

Choosing resources to investigate hearsay that is easily disproven is a waste of time though when you have actual evidence of direct correspondence.

Noone is falling for this crap anymore btw. The Trump smear stuff doesn't work as everyone cried wolf too many times.

Very telling you spend this much energy on a silly email talking about Trump vs people who actually talked and met with Epstein.

pohl 19 days ago [-]
Are you Donald? How can you be certain that nothing exists?
theultdev 19 days ago [-]
> Epstein and pohl are down here in Florida

Wow that's damning pohl, prove you weren't with him.

Even if you provide detailed logs of your whereabouts, that won't be enough because I assume you're lying.

Hearsay is a bitch isn't it.

19 days ago [-]
Aeroi 16 days ago [-]
is there a way to "chat with files" not just the explorer?
Bender 19 days ago [-]
Trump has reversed course [1] "Trump reverses on Epstein files, says he’d sign bill calling for their release"

[1] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XcebHfZ2LbU [video][4 mins]

nofriend 19 days ago [-]
Given how strongly he was against it, this is pretty clearly a ploy. He could release them unilaterally if he hadn't just reopened the investigation which he himself shut down.
Bender 19 days ago [-]
Yeah I have not a clue what is going on behind the scenes or why the previous admin did not release them.
walls 19 days ago [-]
They were sealed at the time, and the admin was following the law.
7jjjjjjj 17 days ago [-]
Biden probably just forgot, like he forgot he promised to do public option. All his attention was focused on sending Isreal more bombs and having dementia.
wredcoll 19 days ago [-]
Famously he asked the fbi to redact his name.
linux_lorax 18 days ago [-]
If the Epstein story is viewed as a manufactured psyop (psychological operation) targeting the American public outside government circles, several key purposes and mechanisms can be inferred from analyses of the narrative's manipulation, conspiracy logic, and the societal response it has triggered:

### Purposes Behind a "Manufactured" Narrative

- *Distraction From Systemic Issues* The media spectacle around Epstein's crimes and network shifts public attention toward lurid details, celebrity involvement, and political intrigue, while potentially obscuring broader questions of elite accountability, institutional corruption, or failures in law enforcement and intelligence oversight. This phenomenon is typical in high-profile scandals: rather than fostering reform, they may act as pressure-release valves, venting public outrage in "safe" directions away from actionable reform or scrutiny of underlying systems.[1][2]

- *Polarization and Conspiratorial Thinking* The Epstein case has fueled intense binary narratives — "elites vs. the people," "deep state cover-up," and similar populist themes. QAnon, MAGA circles, and conspiracy-oriented media have recast Epstein as evidence of a secretive cabal undermining America, intentionally stoking distrust of government, media, and political adversaries. This fragmentation of public trust can benefit actors seeking to create division, distract from policy failures, or delegitimize political opponents.[3][1]

- *Reinforcement of Powerlessness and Fatalism* The widespread belief that Epstein's death was the result of elite conspiracy (i.e., "he knew too much," and "they'll never let the truth out") can breed social fatalism and apathy — the sense that ordinary citizens are powerless against entrenched interests, which can reduce civic engagement or demands for accountability.[2][1]

- *Information Warfare and Blackmail Speculation* Persistent rumors about espionage, blackmail, and covert intelligence operations surrounding Epstein (Israeli ties, spy theories, etc.) serve to keep the public focused on speculation, preventing consensus and muddying facts. This cacophony can be exploited by political or intelligence actors seeking to obscure real mechanisms of elite control or leverage.[4][5]

### Target Audience: American Public

- *General Population (Non-Government Workers)* The intended psychological effect is a mix of outrage, curiosity, and demoralization, wrapped in a sensation of being on the outside of elite secrets. The public is kept vigilant about "pedo networks" and government corruption but largely passive in meaningful action, with most energies channeled into online speculation and politically polarized media.[1][2][3]

### Patterns & Implications

- The Epstein narrative quickly became a "choose-your-own-adventure" for conspiracists, activists, and mainstream skeptics, reinforcing pre-existing suspicions and worldviews.[3][1] - The framing allows elites implicated by proximity to claim victimhood in a supposed media witch-hunt, while others use it to fuel anti-establishment politics.[2][3]

### Conclusion

Considering the story as a manufactured psyop, its chief functions seem to be distraction, polarization, and demoralization of the public, as well as muddying the waters of elite accountability, with the target audience being ordinary Americans outside the machinery of state and intelligence.[5][4][1][2][3]

[1](https://www.lemonde.fr/en/opinion/article/2025/07/20/the-eps...) [2](https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/16/opinion/epstein-trump-sca...) [3](https://www.newyorker.com/news/fault-lines/donald-trump-jeff...) [4](https://www.trtworld.com/article/16616743) [5](https://www.businessinsider.com/jeffrey-epstein-spy-epstein-...) [6](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Et4ujSsluA) [7](https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2019/08/curious-sociopathy-o...) [8](https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2021/11/23/us/document-e...) [9](https://therapynearme.com.au/mental-health-blog/f/psychoanal...) [10](https://www.vox.com/2018/12/3/18116351/jeffrey-epstein-case-...) [11](https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/how-trump-spent-years-...) [12](https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/trove-newly-released-je...) [13](https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2021/05/14/jeffrey-ep...) [14](https://www.npr.org/2025/07/25/nx-s1-5478620/jeffrey-epstein...) [15](https://www.npr.org/2025/05/30/nx-s1-5407856/conspiracy-theo...) [16](https://www.pbs.org/newshour/nation/new-records-detail-how-e...) [17](https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cp8j3e5g74no) [18](https://www.vpm.org/npr-news/npr-news/2025-05-30/how-conspir...) [19](https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c20r07dg6kro) [20](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZsykRb16QRU)

gotta-be-joking 19 days ago [-]
[dead]
wnevets 20 days ago [-]
where is bubba?
analog31 19 days ago [-]
Retired from public office.
trallnag 19 days ago [-]
[flagged]
deelowe 19 days ago [-]
Bubba was allegedly a nickname for clinton.
JKCalhoun 19 days ago [-]
(Also allegedly the name of a horse Ghislaine Maxwell owned.)
19 days ago [-]
19 days ago [-]
wnevets 19 days ago [-]
The nickname itself isn't alleged, which particular bubba is tho.
DonHopkins 19 days ago [-]
[flagged]
19 days ago [-]
20 days ago [-]
tony-john12 19 days ago [-]
[flagged]
sva_ 19 days ago [-]
bot
Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact
Rendered at 07:43:02 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Vercel.