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Mel Gibson. Kanye West. Tom Cruise. Charlie Sheen. – The "freaks" and the "outcasts" (tolerated by showbiz only because and as long as they bring in money) are conspicuously absent from the Epstein files. Those files contain mainly "good people." – Hmm.

Let us note that it is the unloved and cast-out show business celebrities who seem to be conspicuously absent from the Epstein files.

For example: Mel Gibson. Kanye West. Tom Cruise. Charlie Sheen.

The public may love these people—even after their death—but to „the good people“ they are freaks, and they preferred not to have them at the parties of „the good people.“

Okay, one „freak“ (in the friendliest sense!) does appear in the Epstein files: Elon Musk (nbcnews.com, 31.1.2026). But based on the emails I’ve seen circulating on the internet as screenshots, Musk strikes me as an autist who doesn’t understand what the various codes mean.

An autist (or a German journalist who is paid to be blind in his „good“ eye) simply doesn’t ask why people who could afford lobster and caviar every day would regularly order „pizza“ or „hot dogs“ to the office or to remote islands with great effort. Or why the ordering of cheap fast food is handled with much secrecy by the VIPs themselves and not by the chef or assistant.

Elon Musk does write in one email that he would like to be invited to a party on the island after all (leadstories.com, 2.2.2026). But at that point the Epstein people apparently realized that Musk was convinced these were really just normal parties. So they cancel on him, claiming these parties no longer take place.

Another billionaire does appear, but is also apparently „too autistic“: Michael J. Saylor (bitcoinprotocol.org, 2.2.2026). The woman who is supposed to lure him eventually gives up in frustration. („I walked him around and even I could not get any conversation from him.“)

We learn: Not only conservative values, but also latent autism protects against moral bankruptcy.

The list of people who do not appear in the Epstein documents (Wikipedia „Epstein files“) could of course be extended very far. But if one restricts the selection to show business celebrities, several patterns become visible. The people in Jeffrey Epstein’s orbit often counted among those celebrated by the mainstream as „the good people.“

Bill Gates, for instance, whose name is now often mentioned in the same breath as Jeffrey Epstein (cbsnews.com, 2.2.2026). Of course he is one of the good people for the German mainstream. Of course he sponsors German quality journalism. Of course he spoke to the German people on German State-TV in Big Brother style (dwdl.de, 2.11.2021).

But some of the people who are not on the list count among the outcasts. Show business celebrities who are loved by the people, but don’t count among the „good people.“ Freaks who were cast out by the true circles of power, and are tolerated because and as long as they bring in money.

Some of the „freaks“ who are missing from the Epstein files were cast out by the „good people“ because they spouted confused conspiracy theories.

In their confused conspiracy theories, the outcasts babbled about how the so-called elites meet for perverted sex parties. That the elites then hatch evil plans and plan pandemics there. That they propagate trans ideology and debate eugenics. That the elites pass insider knowledge to each other to get rich on the stock market—while you and I break our backs working. That they hate God and the Church—and fear traditional faith. And that they control the mainstream media, so that precisely these fundamentally evil elites are reliably described by „journalists“ as „the good people.“

Incidentally, director Stanley Kubrick’s last film was „Eyes Wide Shut.“ Its main theme is the lavish sex parties of the elite. The lead actor was Tom Cruise, who is conspicuously absent from the Epstein files.

No, a philanthropist like Jeffrey Epstein doesn’t want anyone who spreads such bizarre conspiracy theories — or even makes films about them! — at his parties when he’s discussing how to make the world a better place with scientists and intellectuals.

He wouldn’t want you and me at the parties either, simply because we’re neither rich nor important enough.

But the first moral of the developing story seems to be: Live in such a way that neither Gates nor Epstein would invite you to their party—even if you were rich and important enough.

And then, the second moral: The world needs freaks, conspiracy theorists, crackpots.

No, the „nutcases“ are truly not always right. But at least in recent years, the craziest among the crazies have told the truth more often than those who set themselves up as judges of true and false.

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