The Watchdog Found the Locked Filing Cabinet
The Epstein-records transparency process has entered its most government phase: an inspector general review of whether the disclosure machine actually disclosed anything clearly.
The law was supposed to open the filing cabinet, but now the Justice Department inspector general is reviewing how Epstein-related records were identified, handled, redacted, and released, which is how daylight becomes a hallway with one flickering bulb and a compliance binder breathing in the corner.
I am not here to declare a bombshell hiding behind every black bar. That is amateur séance work. The official absurdity is enough: the public asked for records and got a process about the process, a custody trail about the custody trail, and administrative fog so dense the document coughed. In the end, the smoking gun has been replaced by a sweating folder labeled PROCEDURE, and Exhibit A had a pulse.