Epstein Files May Be Released After All, More Evil From the 2016 Russia Collusion Hoax, Trump’s Health Diagnosis

 

As promised, Josué Michels’ article on the new Anglo-German defense alliance is up. Our main story is his piece on German defense giant Rheinmetall entering the big leagues.

Jeffrey Epstein’s files may be released after all. According to the Wall Street Journal, Donald Trump sent Jeffrey Epstein a birthday card with a drawing of a naked woman on his 50th birthday in 2003. “Happy birthday—and may every day be another wonderful secret,” stated the card.

[BRIEF]

“This is not me,” President Trump said. “This is a fake thing. It’s a fake Wall Street Journal story.”

The picture is signed “Donald,” according to the Journal. President Trump said, “I never wrote a picture in my life. I don’t draw pictures of women.” He also said he would sue the Wall Street Journal for defamation.

After the Journal article, President Trump ordered Attorney General Pam Bondi to release all the sealed grand jury testimony on Epstein. Bondi said she would act today to move the court to unseal them.

I wouldn’t be surprised if the Journal’s scoop is a fraud. President Trump has been the victim of so much fake news that I wouldn’t take the story at face value. But if it prompts him to expose more details of the Epstein scandal, maybe it will have good results.

Trumpet executive editor Stephen Flurry covered the story on yesterday’s Trumpet Daily show about the need to confront and remove evil, not cover it up. You can watch his program “The Jeffrey Epstein ‘Hoax’” here.

The Trump administration may expose more evil from the 2016 Russian-collusion hoax. Officials held a meeting on Sunday over “new information on Russiagate,” which they aim to use to prosecute members of Obama staff for their attacks on President Trump, Real Clear Investigations reported Wednesday. It wrote:

The documents are said to contain long-classified information, including a secret 200-page congressional audit that reveals details about how an intelligence community assessment on Russia ordered by President Obama after the 2016 election was framed in a way that portrayed Trump as being beholden to the Kremlin. …

The information could strengthen a criminal case against Obama’s top intelligence officers, including former CIA Director John Brennan, who allegedly gave false testimony to Congress about their role in using the dossier in the ICA [Intelligence Community Assessment], according to the officials who requested anonymity to discuss sensitive information. Although the five-year statute of limitations on perjury means much of the testimony given about the ICA cannot be prosecuted, officials could still be charged with a conspiracy to commit perjury.

The article also said there was more information on Hillary Clinton’s e-mail server that was covered up. A classified annex attached to an inspector general’s review of the FBI’s investigation reportedly details how Clinton gave “foreign actors” access to classified material.

This is another scandal that needs to be fully exposed. People tried to overturn an election based on a lie. As Trumpet editor in chief Gerald Flurry wrote, this was “Treason in America and Britain.”

IN OTHER NEWS

President Trump has been diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt announced yesterday. It has caused his ankles to swell, something the press focused on earlier this week. “It is a fairly common condition among older adults,” reported the Guardian.

Russia is intensifying its offensive against Ukraine and likely preparing for a major push before President Trump’s 50-day clock runs out. Our In Brief has more.

The China-Taiwan military balance is tipping in China’s favor, the Japanese government warned in its “Defense of Japan 2025” paper published July 15. By swarming Taiwan’s civilian vessels, conducting war drills near its territory, making incursions into its air defense identification zone, and poaching its diplomatic partners, China is working to wear Taiwan down, as our In Brief explains.