Jewish Supremacy in the Epstein File?
—— Recently released emails, documents, and testimony contained in the Epstein files point to more than a network of abuse, revealing what appears to be an insular worldview grounded in hierarchy, entitlement, and contempt for outsiders. In private communications attributed to Jeffrey Epstein and associates, non-Jews are repeatedly referenced with mocking or derogatory language, reflecting what critics describe as a supremacist mindset operating alongside the abuse itself. Several of the released emails show Epstein using the term “goyim,” meaning non-Jews, in a dismissive and contemptuous manner. In one exchange with AI theorist Roger Schank, Epstein refers to profits from shipping futures by writing about “how the Jew makes money,” adding, “let the goyim deal in the real world.” Other communications show similar language used casually, suggesting that this worldview was normalized within Epstein’s private circles. In another email exchange, Hollywood publicist Peggy Siegal asked Epstein whether an event would be “100% Jew night,” to which Epstein replied: “No, goyim in abundance — JPMorgan execs, brilliant WASPs.” In a separate message, Epstein accused a recipient of behaving “just like the GOYIM you do not respect,” language that further underscores the recurring pattern of contempt reflected in the files. An older testimony from Epstein survivor Maria Farmer adds further context. In a 2020 interview, Farmer said her abusers were motivated by an ideology of Jewish supremacy, citing a 1996 conversation with Ghislaine Maxwell in which she was told she would not be served food at an exclusively Jewish country club. Farmer stated that exclusionary attitudes toward non-Jews were a consistent theme among Epstein, Maxwell, and their associates. Maxwell has long been widely believed to have acted as Epstein’s handler or overseer within his broader operation. Taken together, the material suggests that the Epstein files document not only systemic sexual exploitation, but also a closed ideological environment in which power, identity, and hierarchy were intertwined, and in which contempt for non-Jews was expressed openly and without apparent concern.