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In this explosive episode, Amy and Sam dig deeper into the newly released Epstein files, examining why powerful institutions continue to protect perpetrators while exposing victims. We start by revisiting Melinda Gates' final interview before her divorce was announced — the one we recorded with her on What's Her Story. When asked what she and Bill last argued about, Melinda carefully answered "time" and who would spend it on what. Now we understand the full context: Bill's connections to Epstein, the Russian escorts, the STDs. The impossible position she was put in as spouse to someone implicated in the files becomes heartbreakingly clear. Then there's the Amy Robach problem. Remember when she was caught on hot mic saying she had the Virginia Giuffre story three years before it aired? ABC killed that interview because they didn't want to lose access to Will and Kate. The network chose a royal photo op over exposing a pedophile. Now that Amy is an independent journalist with her own platform, where is that evidence? If she gave it to DOJ, it probably fell into a black hole. If she gave it to victims' lawyers, it'll likely disappear under an NDA. Either way, there's no public accountability. The New York Times has its own reckoning to face. Former publisher Arthur Sulzberger appears in the files, with Brad Karp (the now-disgraced former chairman of Paul Weiss) and journalist Michael Wolff discussing how Sulzberger could be their "silver bullet" — their leverage, their way to kill stories and prevent transparency. How can the Times report on any of this when their own leadership is implicated? And how does their current CEO, a woman, live with herself knowing her boss and his family were in bed with Epstein? This brings us to the larger question: why won't DOJ prosecute? We're approaching 20 years of failure to hold powerful men accountable, going back to the original Florida investigation. The feds stepped in, gave Epstein a sweetheart non-prosecution deal that covered him and all his co-conspirators — an agreement so broad that Ghislaine Maxwell could legally argue she should never have been charged. The same pattern played out with Diddy: federal Rico charges that are notoriously hard to prove, when state charges could have been devastating. It's almost like someone is intentionally choosing the path of least resistance. But here's what gives us hope: the children are watching. Ronan Farrow became the journalist who took down Harvey Weinstein perhaps because he watched his father — Woody Allen — continue to operate freely in Hollywood after marrying Ronan's stepsister. Ronan saw the world welcome Woody into rooms, including dinners with Jeffrey Epstein, and he said enough. He held the grownups accountable when no one else would. The next generation won't stay silent about what their parents' generation allowed. Your children will know what institutions you chose to represent, what cases you chose to take, what stories you chose to kill. The uncomfortable truth is this: the rule of law only exists to the extent we're willing to enforce it. When powerful men at law firms, media outlets, and government agencies protect each other, they're telling the rest of us the rules don't apply to them. And they're right — unless we demand accountability. The silence ends when we refuse to be complicit. #EpsteinFiles #Accountability #PowerAndPrivilege #InvestigativeJournalism Sonnet 4.5