In the middle of a heated public exchange, the moment I mentioned the Epstein Files, Congressman Issa looked straight at me and said, “You’re making everything a women’s issue.”
That single sentence stopped me cold.
Because the Epstein Files aren’t just about one gender — they expose a brutal web of power, control, trafficking, and domestic violence that destroyed countless lives while the powerful looked the other way. Flight logs, hidden payments, and sealed names reveal a system that protected abusers for decades, harming women and girls who were silenced, exploited, and discarded.
Issa’s response reveals more than disagreement — it shows how some still refuse to see the human cost behind the scandal.
Yet the files keep opening. More names, more stories, more truth coming to light.
What will the full documents finally prove — and why is acknowledging the suffering still so difficult for some?

“You’re Making Everything a Women’s Issue” — Congressman Issa’s Dismissal of the Epstein Files
In the middle of a heated public exchange, the moment I mentioned the Epstein Files, Congressman Darrell Issa looked straight at me and said, “You’re making everything a women’s issue.”
That single sentence stopped me cold.
Because the Epstein Files aren’t just about one gender — they expose a brutal web of power, control, trafficking, and systemic abuse that destroyed countless lives while the powerful looked the other way. Flight logs, hidden payments, sealed names, and years of documented evidence reveal a protection racket that operated for decades at the highest levels.
Issa’s response reveals more than simple disagreement — it shows how some still refuse to acknowledge the full human cost behind the scandal. It reframes documented exploitation and the suffering of victims as a niche political or ideological issue rather than a fundamental failure of justice and accountability.
Yet the files keep opening. More names, more connections, more stories are coming to light every week.
The real question is: What will the full documents finally prove — and why is acknowledging the suffering still so difficult for some in positions of power?
This isn’t about turning tragedy into politics. It’s about refusing to let power erase the victims and the systems that enabled them. The Epstein Files expose how influence and money can shield abusers for years. Dismissing that reality as “a women’s issue” only protects the very network the documents continue to unravel.
The truth is emerging, whether it’s convenient or not.



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