Was Jeffrey Epstein an asset of Israel’s intelligence agency the Mossad?
Yes, he was.
That is the conclusion of world-renowned security expert Gavin de Becker.
In this interview, de Becker explains how Epstein would blackmail influential people to bend them to the will of the “Deep State”, for lack of a better term.
De Becker’s firm ran the security detail for Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. during his presidential campaign (while the Biden administration was refusing to provide Secret Service protection, as I reported here.)
I recently read and recommended de Becker’s book Forbidden Facts: Government Deceit & Suppression About Brain Damage from Childhood Vaccines.
Besides the insights he provides into Epstein’s operation in the interview, he also discusses his bestselling book The Gift of Fear and the need to trust your intuition.
He also has some wisdom to share about the problem with centralized power and the need for localized decisionmaking. His message here greatly resonates with my own longtime message to stop trusting the government.
The solution to most of the world’s problems is massive decentralization of power. We must stop giving away our own power to corrupt politicians in Washington.
The oppressor no longer uses his own force directly upon his victim. No, our conscience has become too sensitive for that. There is still the tyrant and his victim, but between them is an intermediary which is The State—the Law itself. …
The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else.
Today, as in the past, nearly everyone would like to profit by the labor of others. No one dares admit such a feeling; he even hides it from himself. So what does he do? He imagines an intermediary; he appeals to The State, and every class in its turn comes and says to it: “You, who can do so justifiably and honestly, take from the public; and we will partake of the proceeds.”
Alas! The State is only too much disposed to follow this diabolical advice; for it is composed of ministers and officials—of men, in short—who, like all other men, desire in their hearts and eagerly seize every opportunity to increase their wealth and influence. The State quickly perceives the advantages it can derive from the role entrusted to it by the public. It will be the judge, the master of the destinies of all. It will take a lot: then much will remain for itself. It will multiply the number of its agents, and increase its functions, until it finally acquires crushing proportions. …
But that which is never seen, which never will be seen, and which cannot even be imagined, is that The State can return more to the people than it has taken from them.
— Frédéric Bastiat, The State (1849)


