The fight over the Epstein files exposes a crisis of institutional honesty, not partisan rivalry.
Criminal penalties in the bill put real consequences on any DOJ official who tries to hide or doctor evidence.
New coalitions are forming in Congress because corruption—not ideology—is the actual fault line.
Rick Wilson and Representative Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) step into this moment with a clarity that cuts through the noise, naming a rot that has festered far beyond one man or one party. They treat the release of the Epstein files as a test of whether power still outranks decency in America, insisting that legal transparency is the bare minimum owed to the survivors who have carried this fight for decades.
The bill’s teeth matter—criminal penalties, parallel document streams, and public accountability strip away the usual excuses that shield the powerful. What is emerging here is a recognition that moral integrity can redraw political boundaries when the abuse is undeniable and the victims refuse to disappear. This isn’t about perfect allies; it’s about forcing institutions to remember what justice looks like when people with everything to lose demand it.
Tune in to this urgent conversation with Ro Khanna.
Breaking Silence: Inside the Epstein Files
This may be the first time anyone reading this has ever felt something like agreement with Marjorie Taylor Greene. But today, at the gut-wrenching and powerful press conference for Epstein and Maxwell survivors, there she stood. And her words sounded, well, reasonable.











