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Trump suggests he’d release Epstein files if re-elected: ‘I’d be inclined to do it’

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From LifeSiteNews

By Stephen Kokx

‘A lot of big people went to that island. Fortunately, I was not one of them.’

Donald Trump has yet again floated the possibility that if he is re-elected he will release files the U.S. government has on Jeffrey Epstein, who died under mysterious circumstances in his jail cell in 2019 after being imprisoned for sex trafficking of minors.

Trump was on popular podcaster Lex Fridman’s show Tuesday in what has seemingly become a new campaign strategy to win over young male voters. He has already been interviewed by podcasters Adin Ross and Theo Von, purportedly following the recommendation of teenage son Barron.

Fridman told Trump that it is “very strange” that “the list of clients that went to (Epstein) Island has not been made public.” Trump agreed. “Yeah, it’s very interesting, isn’t it? … I’d certainly take a look at it.”

Trump further remarked that he’d be “inclined to do the Epstein” files and that he’d have “no problem” releasing them.

“A lot of big people went to that island. Fortunately, I was not one of them,” he clarified.

This is not the first time that Trump, who began palling around with Epstein himself in the late 1980s, has talked about the matter. He previously signaled support for releasing Epstein-related files during an appearance on Fox & Friends in June.

“Would you declassify the Epstein files?” host Rachel Campos-Duffy straightforwardly asked him.

“Yeah, I would,” he replied. “I guess I would … you don’t want to affect people’s lives if it’s phony stuff in there, because it’s a lot of phony stuff with that whole world. But I think I would.”

Jeffrey Epstein was a Jewish socialite and close friend to the rich and powerful, many of whom routinely flew with him on his private jet and visited his private Little St. James Island in the Caribbean.

According to a 2016 Fox News report, court documents show that Bill Clinton flew on Epstein’s plane at least 26 times between 2002 and 2003, at times ditching the Secret Service. Clinton laughed off a question posed to him about the matter by a reporter in 2022.

Some of the notable names linked to Epstein were made public when a judge in New York unsealed documents that contained over 170 of his associates. Royal Family member Prince Andrew is perhaps the most notorious.

Epstein, who some say was a spy for the Israeli government, would apparently deceive young women with help from his partner, Ghislaine Maxwell, in order to cater to the sexual desires of international elites. Then, on his island, those people would be put into compromising situations that would later be used as blackmail in order to control them publicly. Maxwell, who is also Jewish, is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence at a low-security facility for aiding Epstein in the sex trafficking of female teenagers.

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Crime

Trump designates fentanyl a ‘weapon of mass destruction’

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Following an alarming rise in fentanyl deaths in recent years, President Donald Trump is taking another step in cracking down on the deadly drug seeping its way onto American streets by designating it a weapon of mass destruction.

The president signed the executive order Monday during an event in the Oval Office, saying the illicit drug “is closer to a chemical weapon than a narcotic.”

The designation comes on the heels of the administration’s increasing military presence in the Caribbean, targeting narco-terrorists and “successful” meetings with Chinese leaders, who have vowed to crack down on the production of precursors of the drug.

Critics of Trump’s move want to address the fentanyl crisis through a different way. For example, a 2024 bill from attorneys general asking former President Joe Biden to do the same thing expressed concerns about political optics and the language akin to military. Overreach and blurred lines in domestic actions, such as rounding up users.

The order would provide the secretaries of the Department of War and Department of Homeland Security to “update all directives regarding the armed forces’ response to chemical incidents in the homeland to include the threat of illicit fentanyl.”

Trump said the fentanyl drug trade “threatens” national security by fueling “lawlessness” in the Western Hemisphere. This is the area of North America and South America, and the islands near each.

“The production and sale of fentanyl by foreign terrorist organizations and cartels fund these entities’ operations – which include assassinations, terrorist acts, and insurgencies around the world – and allow these entities to erode our domestic security and the well-being of our nation,” the order says in part.

Trump said two cartels are predominantly responsible. The Sinaloa Cartel and the Jalisco New Generation Cartel, known also as CJNG, are based in Mexico.

The Drug Enforcement Agency said last December that in 2023, more than 107,000 people died from drug overdoses, with nearly 70% attributed to opioids, like fentanyl.

In late February, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention via its National Vital Statistics System predicted a 24% decline in drug overdose deaths for the 12 months ending in September. The finding was based on 87,000 drug overdose deaths from October 2023 to September 2024, down from 114,000 the year prior.

Trump declared opioid overdose a public health emergency in 2017 during his first term.

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Hero bystander disarms shooter in Australian terror attack

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The chaos that struck Australia on Sunday night produced one moment of astonishing courage: a Sydney shopkeeper, armed with nothing but instinct and grit, charged a gunman at Bondi Beach and wrestled the rifle out of his hands as terrified families ran for cover. Authorities say the act likely prevented even more deaths in what officials have already called an antisemitic terror attack that left 12 people dead and dozens wounded during a Hanukkah celebration along the water.

The hero has been identified as 43-year-old fruit shop owner Ahmed Al Ahmed, a father of two who happened to be nearby when gunfire erupted at the beachfront event “Hanukkah by the Sea,” which had drawn more than 200 people. Footage captured the moment he marched toward the shooter, grabbed hold of the rifle, and overpowered him in a brief, violent struggle. As the gunman hit the pavement, Al Ahmed momentarily pointed the weapon back at him but didn’t fire, instead placing it against a tree before another attacker opened up from a bridge above. He was hit in the hand and shoulder and is now recovering after emergency surgery.

A relative told Australia’s Channel Seven that Al Ahmed had never handled a gun in his life. “He’s a hero — he’s 100 percent a hero,” the family member said. New South Wales Premier Chris Minns echoed the praise, calling the scene “unbelievable,” adding, “A man walked up to someone who had just fired on the community and single-handedly disarmed him. Many people are alive tonight because of his bravery.”

Police say two shooters stepped out of a vehicle along Campbell Parade around 6:40 p.m. and began firing toward the beach. One gunman was killed, the other is in custody in critical condition. Detectives are also investigating whether a third attacker was involved, and bomb units swept the area after reports that an explosive device may have been planted beneath a pedestrian bridge. The toll is staggering: 12 dead, including one shooter, and at least 29 wounded — among them children and two police officers.

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese condemned what he called “a targeted attack on Jewish Australians on the first day of Hanukkah,” saying, “What should have been a night of joy and peace has been shattered by this horrifying evil attack.” Emergency crews flooded the beach as hundreds of panicked people sprinted away from the gunfire. Video shows one attacker firing down toward the sand from the bridge behind Bondi Park before being shot himself in a final standoff captured by drone footage. Both gunmen appeared to be carrying ammunition belts, with witnesses estimating up to 50 rounds were fired.

Australian police have cordoned off properties linked to the suspects and continue to canvass Bondi for additional threats. What remains clear is that Sunday’s attack was met with extraordinary acts of self-sacrifice, none more dramatic than a shopkeeper from Sutherland who walked into gunfire to stop further slaughter.

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