380 How Michael Cohen Inspired Me to Reread the Steele Dossier
đ How Michael Cohen Inspired Me to Reread the Steele Dossier
âPretty Sure It Was UnintentionalâCohen Would Burn It in Effigy if He Couldâ
UPDATE: Some editing needs to be done and to refer back to the original manuscript for certain passages that may be lacking some context. Big decision: do we want to keep the revised or original addendum section? The revised section has some good section headings but OTOH the content of the original addendum is dead on.
𧨠The Dossier That Refuses to Die Cohenâs new book Revenge is framed as a tale of political persecution, but it spends an uncanny amount of time relitigating the Steele Dossierâespecially for a man who insists itâs âdebunked.â The irony? His obsessive denials made me want to reread it. Not the Pee Tape. Not Prague. The architecture. The connective tissue. The parts that havenât been disprovenâand in some cases, have aged disturbingly well.
Cohenâs podcast may be called Mea Culpa, but the book often reads like Sorry Not Sorry. And while he rails against the injustice of his prosecution, he glosses over the campaign finance violation at the heart of it. The injustice isnât that Cohen was indictedâitâs that Trump wasnât. Individual 1 walked free. Cohen walked into prison.
âAt least Sammy the Bull got to testify against John Gotti.â â Revenge, pg. xviii
That line hits hard. Because Cohen wasnât just a fall guyâhe was a disposable asset. And American political history is littered with them. From Iran-Contra to Peter Smith, from Bill Caseyâs conveniently timed brain tumor to the fate of 9/11 investigators who flew too close to the sun, the pattern is clear: when you stop being useful to power, you become expendable.
đ§ Section: Mueller Was Easy to SatisfyâSDNY Was Not
âCohen Didnât Cooperate That Much, and He Certainly Wasnât That SorryâŚâ
𧨠Selective Accountability and the Myth of Full Cooperation A recurring theme in the Mueller Report is its credulous posture toward Trumpâs inner circle. Carter Pageâs Moscow trip? Framed as âpersonal.â Don Jrâs Trump Tower meeting? Taken at face value. Papadopoulosâs Kremlin email tip-off? Omitted, despite Congressional testimony. Even Trumpâs infamous âRussia, if youâre listeningâŚâ line is treated as sarcasmâdespite Muellerâs own admission that Russia attempted to hack Hillaryâs office later that day.
âMueller seems to simply take Don Jrâs wordâŚâ âMueller was satisfied with Cohenâbut he tended to be easy to satisfy.â
Seth Abramsonâs 400-tweet thread remains a public serviceâa forensic counter-narrative to the institutional shrug. Youâre not just rereading the Dossierâyouâre rereading the credulity that let Trump walk.
Meanwhile, SDNY wasnât buying Cohenâs selective contrition. They charged him with:
- Tax evasion: Concealing over $4 million in income
- Bank fraud: False statements on a $500,000 loan
- Campaign finance violations: $280,000 in hush payments to silence two women before the 2016 election
Cohen pled guilty before Judge William H. Pauley III. And while he claims malicious prosecution, SDNY made clear: this wasnât just about Trumpâit was about Cohenâs own conduct.
âHe didnât cooperate THAT MUCH. And he certainly wasnât THAT SORRY.â
This isnât new. Manafort was charged for unrelated financial crimes too. The pattern is clear: when the system wants to make an example, it reaches backward. But when it wants to protect power, it looks away.”
đ Section: Cohenâs Crusade Against the Steele Dossier
âA Ridiculous and Erroneous DocumentââExcept It Wasnât
𧨠Selective Memory and the Politics of Obfuscation Cohenâs ire toward the Steele Dossier is palpableâand revealing. Like Trump and his GOP co-conspirators, he tries to reduce it to mere Democratic opposition research, ignoring the fact that the Fusion GPS project began with anti-Trump Republicans. It wasnât âthe Democratsââit was a lawyer for Hillary Clinton, and even she didnât know the specifics. Most Democratic leaders were in the dark. And the Obama administration? They soft-pedaled Russian interference.
Cohenâs own account inadvertently validates parts of the Dossier. His summary of Carter Pageâs Moscow trip includes details that align with Steeleâs reporting: meetings with Rosneft officials, Kremlin insiders, and Russian energy executives. Pageâs own testimony to Congress confirmed these contacts. Cohen calls it a âthin veneer of credibilityââbut that veneer is real, and itâs more than he admits.
âIt was enough to provide a thin veneer of credibility to an otherwise ridiculous and erroneous document.â â Revenge, pg. 12
But the irony runs deeper: Cohen himself was reportedly considered for Pageâs Moscow trip. And while he rails against Steele, he ends up echoing the same defensive posture as Carter Pageâwho, despite Durhamâs failed prosecution of Igor Danchenko, couldnât prove defamation.
This isnât just personal grievanceâitâs ideological alignment. Cohen spends as much ink attacking Steele as he does Trump, muddying the waters around 2016âs election interference. And in doing so, he contributes to the very obfuscation that Trump, Wemple, and the Savvy MSM have weaponized.
You didnât just reread the Dossierâyou reread it with new eyes, sharpened by time, betrayal, and the collapse of institutional clarity. And what you found wasnât a hoaxâit was a roadmap. One that still hasnât been fully followed.
đ Section: Relitigating 2016âBecause Trump Never Stopped
âThey Can Accept 2020. What They Canât Admit Is That He Stole 2016.â
𧨠Espionage, Denial, and the Repressed Truth Michael Cohenâs insistence that Trump didnât conspire with Russia is more than falseâitâs a contribution to the long-running lie that Trumpâs presidency was legitimate. Cohen may deny Prague, but his work on Trump Tower Moscow places him squarely in the orbit of Russian collusion. And his denials mirror the broader GOP posture: theyâll admit Trump lost 2020, even that he tried to steal itâbut theyâll never admit he stole 2016.
Thatâs why the FBIâs raid of Mar-a-Lago triggered such a visceral reaction. The GOP was ready to move onâuntil the raid. Then they hugged Trump tighter. Because they can do anything but they canât do that. They canât confront the original sin: that Trumpâs campaign colluded with Russia and rogue FBI agents to hijack the 2016 election.
And Cohen? He echoes the same denial. Which is why rereading the Steele Dossierâand Seth Abramsonâs forensic threadsâbecame necessary. The lies told by Trump, his GOP co-conspirators, Erik Wemple, and yes, Michael Cohen, are not harmless. Theyâre the scaffolding of historical distortion.
đ° Section: BuzzFeed, the Dossier, and the Mediaâs Pact of Silence
âThere Was No Race to PublishâThere Was a Race to Bury Itâ
Cohen sued BuzzFeed for publishing the Dossierâbut dropped the suit after the FBI raided his office in April 2018. His framing of the mediaâs role is wildly misleading. He claims reporters raced to publish unvetted scandal. In reality, the Savvy Beltway press raced not to publish. BuzzFeed broke the pactâand was excoriated for it.
âThe very thing that journalists claim they hold dear⌠they sacrificed to print spurious, scandalous and prurient information.â â Revenge, pg. 20
But this is projection. The real scandal was the unspoken agreement to bury the story. Jason Leopold and BuzzFeed violated the unwritten rulesâand thatâs the one thing the Savvy Beltway club never forgives.
Sarah Kendziorâs They Knew captures this perfectly: the biggest scoops donât always get publishedâespecially if they contradict the dominant narrative. Thatâs how we ended up with a trail of orphaned stories, abandoned by their authors, like the New York Times disavowing its own bombshell on Manafort and Julian Assange.
This is not “relitigating 2016″âit’s about restoring its rhythm. Let me know when youâre ready to thread this into the Epilogue or riff on how Kev would react to the mediaâs pact of silence. đĽđđď¸
đľď¸ââď¸ Section: The Worst Kept Secret in WashingtonâAnd Still, It Was Kept
âEveryone Saw It. Everyone Spoke About It. But No One Published It.â
𧨠The Pact of Silence and the Politics of Suppression Cohen documents the Steele Dossierâs pre-publication circulation like a Beltway urban legendâpassed around âlike a bottle of booze at a frat party.â Reporters, staffers, West Wing insiders all knew. But despite this saturation, no one in the mainstream press published a word before the election. That silence wasnât journalistic cautionâit was institutional complicity.
Cohenâs framingâthat the media recklessly rushed to publishâis upside down. The truth? They raced not to publish. And when BuzzFeed finally broke the pact, they were excoriated by the Savvy class for violating the unspoken rules. Christopher Steeleâs outrage wasnât just about the FBIâs inactionâit was about the mediaâs silence.
Comeyâs duality is the fulcrum of this betrayal:
- A. Refused to discuss Russian interferenceâtoo close to the election
- B. Released the Comey Letterâflipping the election to Trump, despite knowing he was compromised
And John McCain? He did what duty demanded. He gave the dossier to Comey, knowing the stakes. Cohen excoriates him, but McCain stood alone in a sea of silence.
đĽ Section: The Lie That Must Be CombatedâCohenâs Denial of Conspiracy
âTrump Was Courting Putin. Everyone Around Him Was Selling Out Their Country.â
Cohenâs complaint that the press âbought the premiseâ is a projection. The press didnât buy itâthey buried it. And Cohenâs denial that the Trump campaign conspired with Russia is not just falseâitâs dangerous. It contributes to the long-running lie that Trumpâs presidency was legitimate.
âRather than agreeing the Dossier should be buried, it led me to reread it with fresh eyes.â
Cohen mocks the idea of a Russian conspiracy while minimizing his own role in the Trump Tower Moscow project. Grassley mocks the idea while his aide Barbara Leeden authored a manifesto urging coordination with Russian hackers. The conspiracy wasnât speculativeâit was provable. And the lies that obscure itâfrom Trump, Grassley, Wemple, and yes, Cohenâmust be confronted.
đ Section: Rereading the Steele DossierâSix Years Later, Still Undisproven
âCohen Calls It Ridiculous. The First Sentence Still Holds.â
𧨠From Cultivation to CollusionâThe Opening Paragraph That Refuses to Die
âRussian regime has been cultivating, supporting and assisting TRUMP for at least 5 years. Aim, endorsed by PUTIN, has been to encourage splits and divisions in western alliance.â â Steele Dossier, pg. 1
Six years later, what part of this has been disproven? None of it. In fact, the evidence has only grown stronger. Putinâs aim to fracture the Western alliance is now self-evident, and Trumpâs role as a destabilizing forceâthreatening NATO, admiring Putin, shakedown diplomacy with Zelenskyâis not speculative. Itâs documented.
Cohenâs attempt to dismiss the Dossier as âridiculousâ collapses under scrutiny. His own trip to Moscow in 2013, the beauty pageant arranged by Aras Agalarov, and the subsequent Trump Tower meeting in 2016 all point to a cozying up that spans decades. Trumpâs financial dependence on Russian capital after his 1990s implosions only deepens the pattern.
đĽ Section: Sexual KompromatâNot Outlandish, Not Unprecedented
âItâs About as âOutlandishâ as the Sun Rising in the Eastâ
The allegation that Trump was compromised via sexual blackmail is often called âoutlandish.â But in the context of Putinâs Russia, itâs not just plausibleâitâs routine. Sexual kompromat is a known tactic, documented in both Russian and American intelligence histories. The idea that Trump, with his long record of sexual misconduct, would be immune to such tactics is laughable.
Cohen insists thereâs no Pee Tape. Fine. But his categorical dismissal isnât persuasiveâitâs performative. Your position is sharper: not certain, but not implausible. And thatâs the forensic posture the canon demands.
đ° Section: The Mediaâs Double StandardâUnvetted for Hillary, Buried for Trump
âWhen It Was Hillary, Nothing Had to Be Vettedâ
The complaints about the Dossier being âunvettedâ ring hollow after 25 years of phony Clinton scandalsâWhitewater, Troopergate, Benghazi, Emailgate. The New York Times gave front-page treatment to unverified innuendo for decades. But when the subject was Trumpâa manifest counterintelligence threatâthe media demanded vetting before even acknowledging the story.
Chuck Grassley calls the Dossier âdebunkedâ while his own aide authored the Leeden Manifesto, urging coordination with Russian hackers. Richard Grenell calls it âoutlandishâ while serving as Trumpâs DNI during the Insurrection. The hypocrisy is not just glaringâitâs strategic.
đłď¸ Addendum: Cohenâs Evasions ContinueâNow on Epstein
âJust Like Russia, Just Like Prague, Just Like Everything ElseâŚâ
In his recent interview with Tara Palmeri, Michael Cohen appears to dissemble about Trumpâs ties to Jeffrey Epsteinâjust as he has about Russia, Prague, and the Steele Dossier. The evasiveness is familiar: vague recollections, selective indignation, and a posture of plausible deniability that collapses under scrutiny.
Cohenâs pattern is clear. He positions himself as a truth-tellerâMea Culpaâbut when the truth implicates Trump in deeper, darker alliances, he retreats into ambiguity. Whether itâs Epstein, Russian financing, or kompromat, Cohenâs instinct is to protect the myth of limited complicity. But the recordâand his own proximityâsuggests otherwise.
This isnât just about Epstein. Itâs about the architecture of denial that has shielded Trump for decades. And Cohen, for all his posturing, remains part of that scaffolding.
đłď¸ Addendum: Cohenâs Final DodgeâToo Certain, Too Convenient
âHe Didnât Just Say He Didnât KnowâHe Said It Couldnât Be Trueâ
Michael Cohenâs interview with Tara Palmeri reveals a familiar pattern: categorical denial followed by selective admission, wrapped in a posture of overconfidence that collapses under scrutiny. When asked about Trumpâs ties to Epstein, Cohen first insisted he knew nothing. Then he admitted to handling a single allegationâone he dismissed as fake because the lawyer âhad never met the client.â
Palmeri pressed: was the client Katie Johnson, the woman who accused both Trump and Epstein of raping her in 1994 when she was 13? Cohen insisted no. But Dylan Howardâs Epstein: Dead Men Tell No Tales describes the exact same sceneâa lawyer who never met his client, and the client was Katie Johnson.
Cohen admits to sending a private investigator after her. Thatâs not ignoranceâitâs active involvement. And his eagerness to declare the allegation false based on flimsy procedural grounds mirrors his posture on Russia, Prague, and Ivana Trumpâs rape allegation: not just denial, but defensive exoneration.
âI never dealt with the Katie Johnson matter.â â Cohen to Newsweek
But the record suggests otherwise. Cohenâs role wasnât passive. He was Trumpâs fixer. And this was exactly the kind of mess he was hired to âfix.â
This isnât just about Epstein. Itâs about the architecture of denial that has shielded Trump for decades. And Cohen, for all his posturing, remains part of that scaffolding.
Sources:
- Dylan Howard, Epstein: Dead Men Tell No Tales (Skyhorse, 2020)
UPDATE: Tara Palmieri rightly saw her interview with Cohen as very revealing and notes the media’s refusal to engage with the quite striking revelation about Cohen-namely that he sent a private investigator after Katie Johnson.
“For me, the Epstein story has never been about politics. Itâs about piecing together a sprawling sex trafficking operation for survivors whoâve been denied justice for decades. I donât care if the trail leads to Democrats or Republicans. Iâve been on it since mysterious Epsteinâs death â hosting two investigative podcasts, Broken: Jeffrey Epstein and Power: The Maxwells, and following leads from anyone brave enough to send them my way.”
Certainly agree here but note that the reason the client list-or the full information regarding Epstein’s files-won’t be released is for partisan reasons: Trump and his co-conspirators won’t release it. The position of the Democrats has been clear-release the files-or information or whatever you want to call it. If there are Democrats also implicated damn the torpedoes let’s get this information out. In Congress all Democrats voted to release the files all Republicans -except maybe one or two-voted against release.
The fact that it wasn’t released during the Biden Administration-something Trump and his GOP co-conspirators have attempted to make heavy weather over is irrelevant-Biden had never promised he would release them. After all it had been the MAGA base who have been pounding the table over it for years. Now that MAGA has caught the car Trump is refusing to release the files. This after Pam Bondi had declared they were on her desk in February. Now she would have us believe there are no files.
The only reason they are not released today is because of the Republican party. This is not a “partisan statement” simply a fact. So while I understand Palmieri prefers to see it as a nonpartisan issue, partisan issues have stalled progress and led to the reprehensible fact that a sex trafficker and pedophile like Ghislaine Maxwell has since been sent to a much comfier prison and had her sex offender status dropped in what certainly appears to be a glide path to a pardon at some point.
CODA: The rather flaccid narrative that for some reason we shouldn’t release the files now because Biden didn’t do it in his term is based on upside down logic. The premise seems to be that the Democrats are only asking for it for partisan reasons. If you take this premise to its logical conclusion the GOP argument is that the Democrats who all voted to release it in Congress don’t really want it to be released they just want to “embarrass President Trump” and the Republicans. But if this were so the solution couldn’t be simpler: relesae the files. This alleged Democrat strategy only works to the extent that the Republicans play along and DON’T RELEASE THE FILES. So this argument doesn’t pass the laugh test.
I will say that until recently many establishment Democrats were looking at the whole thing through an upside down telescope. Pelosi had used this upside down logic on the Sunday shows declaring the Epstein files were a distraction. If there are three words I which no elected Democrat ever used again it would be “it’s a distraction.”
The leadership Dem sentiment was along the lines of “gee isn’t this rich, Trump has gotten hoisted by his own petard, fomenting all this excitement over the client list when obviously there isn’t one”-why would you assume there isn’t one? I mean I don’t know if it’s literally a “client list” but obviously there are a lot more names in the government files-including Trump’s which reportedly came up over 100 times-that he doesn’t want to ever see the light of day.
Back to Palmieri:
Then this weekend it dawned on me that Michael Cohen, President Donald Trumpâs former fixer, who appeared on MSNBC this weekend to declare thereâs no way Trump ever went to Epsteinâs island because Trump denied it âmore than five, six times,â could have more information on why Trump doesnât want the Epstein files released. Afterall, he worked for him for 12 years, even if they werenât the years that Epstein was in Trumpâs life. But Cohen seemed to be covering for Trump in the case, questioning on CNN a Wall Street Journal report that Trump once gave Epstein a depraved card with a suggestive doodle, insisting Trump doesnât doodle or use the word âenigma.â Both claims are false â Trumpâs doodles have been auctioned at Sothebyâs, and heâs used the word âenigmaâ on the record”
Here I couldn’t agree with Palmieri more-why would Cohen be trying to cover for Cohen here? I noticed on her podcast she’d stated this is the first time Cohen’s had something helpful for Trump in years-since he turned against him in 2018 after the raid of his home. This as this chapter shows is not quite true. For years he’s denied in an ad hominem way that Trump colluded with Russia just as he’s insisted Trump didn’t rape Ivanna Trump despite Ms. Trump testifying to this fact under oath in a court of law. So in fact Cohen actually defends Trump quite often it turns out which is rather surprising seeing as Cohen testified against him in both Congress and federal court and how Trump and Bill Barr had locked Cohen back up in the middle of the Covid lockdown in 2020 just to prevent him publishing his first book-Disloyal.
But her basic intuition is right-it IS pretty surprising that Cohen seems eager to cover for Trump on Epstein just as it seems odd that he covers for him on Russia, Russia, Russia, Ivanna Trump, et al. Why this is, is a pretty interesting question. I have a few theories:
- Stockholm’s Syndrome. While Cohen has turned against Trump and testified against him publicly there’s still an emotional part of him that still sees Trump as the demigod he saw him while he served him for over a decade
- In protecting Trump he is protecting himself as he has a lot more knowledge in these various episodes I laid out above and most importantly he has his own exposure.
Back to Ms. Palmieri:
So why defend Trump here? Thatâs when the puzzle clicked: In 2016, just before the election, a Jane Doe known as âKatie Johnsonâ accused Trump of raping her at Epsteinâs Manhattan townhouse when she was 13. She filed three lawsuits. Days before the election, she dropped the last one, citing threats.
Who would have handled a nuclear allegation like that? Trumpâs fixer. Michael Cohen.
I ask Cohen on The Red Letter Live about Trumpâs relationship with Epstein, and after four minutes of flat denials, âI have no knowledge of anything with Jeffrey Epstein. Zero,â he cracked. On the record, Cohen admitted he had handled a rape complaint tied to Epstein and Trump. That is not a leak, not an anonymous source, itâs his own confession.
And hereâs where the real story is: no one in the mainstream media has touched it.
đ Read more to understand why only independent media can cover a story like this.
This is the same Michael Cohen who went to prison for arranging Trumpâs hush money payment to Stormy Daniels and for coordinating the National Enquirerâs âcatch and killâ of Karen McDougal. Heâs admitting he deployed a private investigator to track down a Jane Doe in a rape case involving Epstein and Trump, a tactic straight out of the Epstein intimidation playbook.
One Epsteinâs own victims, Courtney Wild, told me in Broken how Epsteinâs private investigators followed her, nearly running her off the road. His private investigators stalked the social media of victims to smear them in the state case too. Jane Does use pseudonyms to protect themselves from that kind of retaliation, and here was Cohen, describing on tape how he tried to unmask one.
Cohen insists this wasnât âKatie Johnson,â but thereâs no other known TrumpâEpstein case on the docket at that time. If thatâs true, then he has direct knowledge of the only public TrumpâEpstein complaint before the election, and perhaps exactly why Trump doesnât want the Epstein files released.
And I can attest that in retrospect it’s almost certain that the client was Katie Johnson. In quite a moment of serendipity I was actually then reading Dylan Howard’s book on Epstein “Epstein: Dead Men Tell No Tales” and in the epilogue Howard describes the exact same sceneâa lawyer who never met his client, and the client was Katie Johnson.
Cohen admits to sending a private investigator after her. Thatâs not ignoranceâitâs active involvement. And his eagerness to declare the allegation false based on flimsy procedural grounds mirrors his posture on Russia, Prague, and Ivana Trumpâs rape allegation: not just denial, but defensive exoneration.
âI never dealt with the Katie Johnson matter.â â Cohen to Newsweek
But the record suggests otherwise. Cohenâs role wasnât passive. He was Trumpâs fixer. And this was exactly the kind of mess he was hired to âfix.â
This isnât just about Epstein. Itâs about the architecture of denial that has shielded Trump for decades. And Cohen, for all his posturing, remains part of that scaffolding.
I also completely agree with her that it’s very striking that the media has entirely ignored this potentially very important story. She conjectures maybe it’s because Cohen’s become a kind of #Resistance hero the last few years.
Is it because Cohen has become a darling of the anti-Trump resistance, and no one wants to complicate the narrative? Is it because the allegation cuts too close to the core of power? Whatever the reason, the result is the same: one of the most biggest admissions in Trump-Epstein saga is being ignored by the very institutions that are supposed to hold power to account.”
I am almost certain it’s not the first explanation. There probably are #resistance folks-thinking of folks like Medias Touch-who still harbor the illusion that Cohen is an unambiguously ally. Clearly I am not among these folks as this chapter richly attests. But the reality is the mainstream media could care less about #Resistance libs like many of us. Since late 2018 at the latest the Savvy mainstream has treated the #Resistance with barely contained contempt. OTOH I do think her second conjecture is closer to the mark-that it cuts to close to power. The media has had nothing but disdain for those of us who haven’t memoryholed Russian interference and collusion, and they have little more taste for the Epstein story.
Where Palmieri is undoubtedly right is that mainstream media isn’t the solution it’s the problem-any forward momentum with the football for Team Epistemological Truth will have to come from independent journalists and writers.
CODA: The Big Picture
What’s interesting is that Palmeiri’s question about the media regarding her Cohen interview is my question about the media in this entire book-why do they so often ignore the important stories? Why do they seem to prefer bad and counterintuitive narratives? A major part of the answer I’m sure is to preserve the status quo and protect illegitimate power.
Just like her question regarding Cohen’s counterintuitive covering for Trump on Epstein is my question in this entire chapter regarding why he seems to cover for Trump on many other things too.
Copilot’s revised final section:
đłď¸ Section: The Fixerâs Final ConfessionâAnd the Mediaâs Pact of Silence
âI Never Dealt With Katie JohnsonââExcept He Did
𧨠Cohenâs Evasions, Palmieriâs Precision, and the Architecture of Denial In her interview with Michael Cohen, Tara Palmeri unearthed a revelation that should have detonated across every newsroom in America: Cohen admitted to sending a private investigator after a Jane Doe who accused Trump and Epstein of rapeâa tactic straight out of Epsteinâs intimidation playbook. The woman? Almost certainly Katie Johnson.
Cohen insists it wasnât her. But Dylan Howardâs Epstein: Dead Men Tell No Tales describes the exact same sceneâa lawyer who never met his client, and the client was Katie Johnson. Cohenâs denial isnât ignoranceâitâs active involvement, followed by defensive exoneration.
âI never dealt with the Katie Johnson matter.â â Cohen to Newsweek
But the record suggests otherwise. Cohenâs posture mirrors his pattern on Russia, Prague, and Ivana Trumpâs rape allegation: not just denial, but eager absolution. He doesnât just say âI donât knowââhe insists it couldnât be true. Thatâs not resistance. Thatâs scaffolding.
Palmieriâs intuition is dead-on: this is one of the most significant admissions in the TrumpâEpstein saga, and the media wonât touch it. Why? Because Cohen has become a Resistance mascot. Because the allegation cuts too close to power. Because complicating the narrative is taboo.
Meanwhile, the Epstein files remain sealedânot because Biden failed to release them, but because Trump and his GOP co-conspirators refuse to. Every Democrat in Congress voted to release them. Nearly every Republican voted against. Pam Bondi once claimed they were on her desk. Now she says they donât exist.
This isnât just about Epstein. Itâs about the upside-down logic that shields power, punishes truth, and buries survivors. And Cohen, for all his posturing, remains part of that scaffolding.
𧨠CODA: Itâs Not About Protecting CohenâItâs About Protecting Power
The mediaâs refusal to engage with Cohenâs admission isnât about preserving his #Resistance persona. The mainstream press has never cared much for the Resistanceâoften treating it with thinly veiled contempt. What theyâre protecting is power itself. The Epstein files implicate too many, cut too deep, and threaten too much. Thatâs why they remain sealed. Thatâs why Cohenâs confession was met with silence. And thatâs why the institutions tasked with holding power to account have chosen complicity over confrontation.
đ§ CODA: The Big PictureâWhy the Media Keeps Missing the Story
âAny Forward Momentum for Team Epistemological Truth Will Come from the Outsideâ
Tara Palmieriâs question about the mediaâs silence on Cohenâs Epstein admission is the same question animating this entire book: why does the mainstream press so often ignore the most important stories? Why do they prefer counterintuitive narratives that preserve confusion over clarity?
The answer, in part, is structural: to protect illegitimate power. Since late 2018, the Savvy mainstream has treated the #Resistance with barely concealed contempt. Theyâve memoryholed Russian interference, minimized collusion, and shown little appetite for the Epstein story. Itâs not about protecting Cohenâitâs about shielding the scaffolding.
Palmieri is right: the mainstream media isnât the solutionâitâs the problem. Any forward momentum for Team Epistemological Truth will come from independent journalists, writers, and those willing to violate the unspoken rules of institutional silence.
And just as Palmieri asked why Cohen seems so eager to cover for Trump on Epstein, this chapter asks the same question about Russia, Prague, Ivana Trump, and more. The pattern isnât randomâitâs architectural. And it demands confrontation, not complicity.
𧨠Section: The Files, the Fiction, and the Flaccid Excuses
âIf Democrats Are Bluffing, Republicans Should Call ItâBy Releasing the Filesâ
Tara Palmieriâs framing of the Epstein investigation as nonpartisan is admirableâbut the obstruction is decidedly partisan. The reason the Epstein files remain sealed is not bureaucratic inertia or institutional cautionâitâs Republican protectionism, centered around Trump and his co-conspirators.
Every Democrat in Congress voted to release the files. Nearly every Republican voted against. If Democrats were bluffingâif this were just a ploy to âembarrass Trumpââthen the solution is simple: release the files. The GOPâs refusal to do so is the only thing keeping this alleged bluff alive. And that argument doesnât pass the laugh test.
Pam Bondi, Trumpâs loyal Attorney General, once claimed the files were âon her desk.â Now she insists they donât exist. Trump, who once promised transparency, now worries about âinnocent peopleâ being hurtâa curious concern from a man whose name reportedly appears over 100 times in the documents.
Meanwhile, Ghislaine Maxwell has been transferred to a more comfortable facility, had her sex offender status dropped, and appears to be on a glide path to a pardon. This isnât justiceâitâs insulation.
đ§ CODA: The Upside-Down Telescope and the Mediaâs Pact of Silence
The narrative that Biden failed to release the files is upside-down logic. Biden never promised to release them. It was Trumpâs MAGA base that demanded disclosure. Now that theyâve âcaught the car,â Trump is refusing to deliver. The mediaâs silence isnât about protecting Cohenâs #Resistance brandâitâs about protecting power.
Even establishment Democrats once looked through the upside-down telescope. Pelosi called the Epstein files âa distraction.â But if there are three words no elected Democrat should ever utter again, itâs âitâs a distraction.â
Palmieriâs questionâwhy the media wonât touch Cohenâs admissionâis the same question animating this entire book: why do they ignore the stories that matter most? The answer is structural: to preserve the status quo, protect illegitimate power, and avoid confronting the truths that cut too close to the core.