26 Comments
User's avatar
JSR's avatar

“ who was by then working as a golf caddie at Donald Trump’s Mar A Lago Resort”

It’s all a show…

Expand full comment
Reasonable Horses's avatar

I’m no Columbo, but I doubt Virginia Giuffre suicided. Typical coverups plant allegations all over the map to muddy the trail. That said, the ex should be the prime suspect, and that guy has overwhelming motives. Add Epstein to the mix, and the list of possible and highly sophisticated suspects is huge.

Oh, and one more thing… Even if Trump was not an Epstein client (highly debatable), he probably has plenty of reasons to cover for many of the perps. His best/worst reason could be leverage. If all the corruption around the swamp came to light, crowds of Congressional, White House, and DOJ insiders would probably suicide, flee the country, or get locked up for life. Some are no doubt useful for the administration. Sad, that our world has come to this. Maybe it's always been here but just moved a little more slowly.

Expand full comment
SAMO's avatar

hmmm. interesting take.

Expand full comment
ExcessDeathsAU's avatar

As someone from Perth (where Ms Guiffre was living for many years) I will probably be the only person who believes that she indeed took her own life. It is a small town and she was unwell. When I saw the news I was extremely upset. She was having a very rough time.

For what it's worth, this is the testimony of the bus driver: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14563827/Bus-driver-crash-Virginia-Giuffre-four-days-live-story.html

Expand full comment
Amy Sukwan's avatar

Thanks for the link of the bus driver statement. Paranoia and delusions are common in victims of these types of things and can also be pushed along further through gaslighting and other tactics. So it becomes a slippery slope to untangle. I'd love to know about the family court documents: for the mother to be denied even visitation with her three teenage children would imply extreme behavior on her part and/or a very coordinated campaign against her. Alienation from their children also puts mothers especially at an increased risk of suicide. So I'm not going to automatically say that the voices in her head didn't tell her to do it, but that also raises questions of targeting for the more conspiracy minded...

Expand full comment
Michael A. Stilinovich's avatar

Epstein is just the tip, go to the 2:03 timestamp and listen to Ted Gunderson for about 2:10.

https://kimosboel.substack.com/p/satanic-luciferian-pedophiles-the-678?publication_id=1949996&post_id=162257190&isFreemail=false&r=ql54s&triedRedirect=true

Expand full comment
Reasonable Horses's avatar

It’s impossible to imagine Sodom and Gomorrah any more sick and corrupt than modern America. We deserve God's judgment. If we are to restore our one nation under God, we need His mercy.

Expand full comment
Bhavana Lymworth's avatar

Hi Michael,

I listened to this from the beginning, and Gunderson actually begins speaking at 2:03 and is well into it by 2:30.

Expand full comment
Michael A. Stilinovich's avatar

Thanks, for the correction, I must be dyslexic but it's a good thing I'm ambidextrous to cancel that shit out.

Expand full comment
jacquelyn sauriol's avatar

Somehow I got thru all (ALL) my cohorts getting inked, and never did. I even meant to, but something in me just didn't want to. Same with the jabs. Cellular memory, and tatoo inks are icky and sus imo. I am near 61 now. https://youtu.be/vuL4g37_xPs?si=FRG09ad2HQaptPN0 on tattoo inks.....lots of other stuff in inks, surfectants etc.

Expand full comment
Amy Sukwan's avatar

I have no tattoos and no piercings, which is probably remarkable in itself. Basically every girl I went to school with had at least her ears pierced and I'm hard pressed to think of a single one who also has no tattoos. It's funny with tattoos how getting inked used to be the unique personal statement but it became so popular that with the lower and working classes it simply became the signifiar of being just that...

Expand full comment
Honeybee's avatar

One topic I forgot. I've been sleeping with the Schumann Resonance generator for about 1 1/2 weeks. It took time. I didn't sleep so well the first few nights, but now I'm sleeping so well. The dreams are right there when I wake up if I want to remember them. I'm remembering a different quality of dreams...if this makes any sense. Very different. I have a feeling of well being I haven't had. Something is definitely different.

But...the machine took time to work. I even thought in the first 1-3 days of discontinuing working with the machine. If old age has provided me with one terribly valuable asset, it is to wait. Herbs take time. Experiences take time. Everything takes time. We're too impatient and expect results instantly...especially people who use smartphones. Life takes time.

Expand full comment
Amy Sukwan's avatar

Sometimes it is good to wait. I pay close attentions to my dreams and even whether I have dreams or remember them or not. A great deal of healing happens while we sleep. It's among the greatest mysteries of so called science...

Expand full comment
Honeybee's avatar

I agree, Amy. The sleep I'm getting these days feels so restorative that I, too, have started reflecting on how unique the sleeping process is and have begun experiencing how well we feel with good sleep. I never thought I would make such a statement because shift work disrupted my sleep so severely the last decade I worked that I've struggled for years and years after retiring. I think of all the people I've read who say they don't get a good night's sleep...and I've certainly been among that number. EMFs seem to play such a huge role today, and finding ways to sleep well has become a priority for people by what I read on web.

Expand full comment
Honeybee's avatar

I, too, am glad you brought up Virginia Giuffre. I was shocked to read of her death. After reading about her for a little while, I agree with ExcessDeathsAU that she committed suicide.

Today I listened to a fellow called Ryan Dawson on Seemorerocks Substack. I don't participate in X. He believes she committed suicide, too. He has one excellent point: why would anyone associated with Epstein want to bring this issue front and center again by "suiciding" Virginia?

https://seemorerocks.substack.com/p/ryan-dawson-who-has-studied-epstein?img=https%3A%2F%2Fsubstack-post-media.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F6ca05e88-eca4-4f26-8a6e-d9d100765ff9_979x539.png&open=false

I'm just greatly saddened by her death. I think the dissolution of her marriage; the loss of her three kids; the impending legal fights; etc. drove her to a point from which she couldn't escape. I think her testimony from the hospital showed how out of touch she became with herself. As Dawson points out, she already had a pre-existing kidney problem, and the hospital likely diagnosed further degeneration.

I wish Virginia could have found someone she trusted to undergo some therapy. I think she was dealing with issues which finally overwhelmed her. So many endeavors take time. I think, even if she attempted therapy, she may have left when she felt she wasn't being helped.

Her marriage and children probably provided the stability so many years she needed, but life is fragile. If we carry any lesson from Virginia's demise, I hope people realize that problems, feelings, and so forth can arise again after many years of seeming mental/emotional stability.

Life is not certain, and life is constant change. Change includes positivity and negativity.

I grieve for her.

Expand full comment
Retired Librarian's avatar

Thank you Amy, really fine of you to write about her, so very sad. Donald Jeffries substack on this is also good. I am grateful for your questions & your remembrance of her.

Expand full comment
nymusicdaily's avatar

“Mom. I am not like getting tattoos.”

AWOL or not, Amy, you done good

Expand full comment
Clay Henley's avatar

Sad and angry

Expand full comment
Cheeky Gesturton's avatar

Lex Wexner……. ‘Head of the Snake’. Bigger story than just the awful tragedy and tawdriness.

Mossad does it all for the greater good.

Expand full comment
Lynn's avatar

I met my first pedophile when I was 5 living in CA in the early 1960s. I still remember him picking me up by my forearms to put me on his lap. I screamed and carried on and the only thing that saved me was my sister and friend were in another room of the house. We would go to this house all the time to swim in the lady's pool. No issues. But this one day she wasn't home and her son answered the door.... I don't know what happened to him, but a quick search of the house and records show he may have been arrested over the past decades. Don't know how many victims he had, and I shiver to think of what he did.

Expand full comment
zdb's avatar

thank you

Expand full comment
Barbara's avatar

I was in the west side of Michigan when I met a young lady. She made jewelry and the underside of that butterfly has a design just like her creations.

Now you have me thinking about her.

Expand full comment
Barbara's avatar

I was in the west side of Michigan when I met a young lady. She made jewelry and the underside of that butterfly has a design just like her creations.

Now you have me thinking about her.

Expand full comment
Kyle Young's avatar

Nice work Amy.

Maybe they used military tactics and kept the girls compartmentalized so Virginia was in a group that never saw the ones from the breeding programs.

Expand full comment
Amy Sukwan's avatar

I do think these sophisticated sex trafficking rings would have been compartmentalized. Virginia Giuffre was likely in the A group of fun girls, those who are compliant and seem a bit more trustworthy to bring to parties. The darker ritual stuff especially with much younger children was just not her department...

Expand full comment