The latest updates on the Epstein Transparency Act

Epstein: Patel, Bondi, & Perjury


The Epstein Files Transparency Act was passed with a clear and narrow purpose: to restore public trust by forcing the federal government to release investigative materials related to Jeffrey Epstein and his trafficking operation. The law is explicit. Redactions are permitted only to protect victims or matters of national security. Nothing more.

Yet what the public has received so far directly contradicts both the spirit and the letter of that law.

The vast majority of documents released under the Act are heavily redacted, often to the point of being unreadable. Names, associations, dates, and entire passages have been blacked out. This raises a fundamental question: how does protecting the identities of alleged traffickers, facilitators, or co-conspirators constitute national security? Victim protection is necessary and morally justified. Shielding potential criminals from public accountability is not.

If national security is being invoked to justify these redactions, the government owes the public a clear explanation. Pedophilia, sex trafficking, and the concealment of criminal networks are not self evident matters of national defense. If disclosure would compromise intelligence assets, diplomatic relations, or classified operations, that justification must be articulated, not hidden behind sweeping black ink.

The situation becomes even more troubling when considering recent statements and actions by senior officials.

Attorney General Pam Bondi publicly stated that Epstein files “do not exist.” That claim is directly contradicted by the government’s own released materials. Volume 8 of the Epstein files explicitly references an active 2019 FBI investigation into ten co-conspirators connected to Epstein’s trafficking operation. These references are not speculative; they are documented within the records now available to the public.

At the same time, Kash Patel testified under oath that neither he nor the FBI had any knowledge or reason to believe anyone other than Ghislaine Maxwell was involved with Epstein. That testimony is incompatible with the contents of the released files. If the FBI was actively investigating multiple co-conspirators in 2019, then either that sworn testimony was false, or the Bureau has a far deeper internal accountability problem than it has acknowledged.

Under federal law, perjury occurs when an individual knowingly makes a false statement under oath about a material fact. The standard is not misunderstanding, opinion, or later reinterpretation it is whether the person knew the statement was false at the time it was made and whether that falsehood was relevant to the matter under investigation. Lying under oath, particularly to Congress, is a serious felony punishable by fines and imprisonment. When sworn testimony directly contradicts documented evidence held by the government at the time, accountability is not discretionary; it is the mechanism by which the rule of law is preserved.

Equally concerning is the apparent halt in document releases over the past several weeks. The Transparency Act mandates disclosure. A prolonged pause without explanation raises the possibility that the Department of Justice is no longer acting in compliance with federal law. Failure to continue releasing files, combined with redactions that exceed statutory limits, may itself constitute a violation of the Act.

This is no longer about speculation, conspiracy, or partisan politics. It is about statutory compliance, sworn testimony, and documentary evidence. When public officials make definitive claims that are contradicted by their own agency’s records, the burden shifts to those officials to explain the discrepancy.

Compounding these concerns is the clear hypocrisy in Attorney General Bondi’s public posture. Bondi has repeatedly stated that “no one is above the law,” most notably in reference to the Clintons and alleged attempts to avoid court accountability. Yet those words ring hollow when weighed against her own actions. Failing to continue mandatory disclosures, dismissing the existence of documented files, and allowing unlawful redactions to persist is not the enforcement of law, it is the neglect of it. The principle that no one is above the law must apply equally to political opponents and to those charged with upholding the law themselves.

Transparency under the Epstein Files Transparency Act was not optional. It was the law.

The Epstein case did not end with one man and one accomplice.
The files say so themselves.

I encourage everyone to take a deep dive into the files that have officially been released to the public via the DOJ website linked below, as well as the other articles regarding this case on WSRR Radio!


The Complete Up To Date Epstein Documents

The following are the full documents that have been released to public records so far.


The purpose of the following is to provide complete transparency and public access to the release of the Epstein documents. This is NOT a political piece or commentary. It is NOT intended to draw conclusions or make assumptions about any real-life events beyond what has been officially documented. The validity of these materials can only be confirmed through the official sources that have published them. We are not making any additional accusations, implications, or rhetoric. The sole purpose of this post is to provide clarity, transparency, and information.



Nationalism is NOT bad

The past few years have seen the term “nationalism” take quite the beating, being warped and twisted by the main stream media as well as social networks. It’s important to remember just what nationalism really stands for.

While the term “Nationalism” has seemingly taken on a negative connotation over the past few years, be assured that being a nationalist is not, and should never be seen as disparaging. While surely there are multiple instances we can trace to the shift in attitude surrounding nationalism, none seem to be as apparent in America as the 2016 presidential election and the events leading up to it. With much of then-candidate Donald Trump’s campaign being based around bringing jobs back to The United States rather than outsourcing our country’s workforce, the “Make America Great Again” movement relied heavily on nationalistic morals. This is seemingly where much of the divide and confusion stemmed from. As the 2016 presidential election rolled on, American citizens, politicians, and media sources alike who opposed the Trump lead, Republican campaign began to make unwarranted claims of “racism” due to the foundations his run was established on. While his opposition saw building border walls around the southern United States and tightening voting laws as an act of prejudice, in actuality these ideas were backed by the simple plan of strengthening America from within and taking the time to rely on ourselves as a nation once again for Jobs, Income, and Economic growth. Because of this, often times we saw the term “Nationalism” linked alongside “Racism” or “prejudice” by the Republican party’s opposition. Still to this day, this stigma remains despite President Joe Biden holding office now for his third year, this issue has surpassed a single isolated election.

The Issue with Aligning Nationalism to a Political Party

This issue is much deeper at this point than red vs. blue. Because of the events surrounding the 2016 election onward, people seem to affiliate nationalism with The Republican Party, however, the nationalism they align is this new misconstrued warped, evil view of it. Let it be perfectly clear,
Nationalism is not a party. Nationalism is not Republican. Nationalism is not Democrat.

At its core, behind all the mud-slinging, all the media discrepancy, all the slander campaigns, Nationalism is quite simply the belief in your own nation. Being a nationalist does not mean you agree wholeheartedly with any particular politician, political party, or even the United States Government as a whole because nationalism is not political. There is absolutely nothing wrong with wanting your country to succeed, being thankful that you have been blessed with the opportunities you have because of this nation, and most importantly, regardless of who may hold the oval office and how your beliefs align with theirs, being proud of the place you are from and wanting it to get better. Being a nationalist by no means implies you think America is flawless, on the contrary, it means you want to see it improve, grow, and become stronger and better than ever.

On September 11th, 2001, The United States of America suffered one of, if not THE most, tragic events on US soil to date. On that day and the days following, we as Americans were hurt, confused, angry, and lost, but we weren’t alone. We stood tall together. We cried, prayed, fought, and rallied together. We did this not as Republicans, Not as Democrats, but as Americans. In this tragic event, we were reminded how small we really are. More importantly, were reminded that in this crazy world, we still had each other, our fellow Americans. together we watched along at home as Neil Armstrong became the first man to step foot on the moon, we wept together when President John F. Kennedy was taken from us right before our eyes, we rejoiced together as Osama Bin Laden was brought down by American forces. All of this we did together, as Americans.

That is what Nationalism is.

-Style