Secrets, Sex Crimes, and Congress

What unfolded around Stacey Plaskett was less a simple ethics dispute and more a collision between morality and the brutal pragmatism of power. Her critics insisted that any cooperation with Jeffrey Epstein, even for committee preparation, crossed a line that no title or duty could justify. She argued that the pursuit of truth in Washington has always required walking through darkness, and that refusing information because of its source is a luxury the powerful rarely grant themselves.

As both parties circled the Epstein files, their motives exposed a deeper fear: not of what Epstein did, but of who else might be revealed alongside him. Democrats and Republicans alike have dangled partial disclosures, hinting at devastating secrets while keeping the full record locked away. Now the demand for total transparency threatens to consume them all, because opening every file means admitting how many careers were built in the shadow they helped maintain.