Anand Giridharadas’s examination of “The Epstein Class” lays bare an uncomfortable truth: Jeffrey Epstein did not operate in a vacuum. His crimes were enabled, normalized, and shielded by a vast network of politicians, financiers, academics, and cultural power brokers who saw him not as a predator but as a passport into deeper circles of influence. This is not merely a story of one man’s depravity; it is a portrait of an elite ecosystem that protects its own at any cost.
What should alarm every American is how consistently institutions—universities, foundations, media outlets, and even federal agencies—chose silence, deference, or collaboration instead of accountability. The question is no longer whether Epstein acted alone; it is whether our society is willing to confront the powerful who continue to evade scrutiny.
Until every enabler is named, every concealed relationship exposed, and every institution held responsible for its complicity, justice remains incomplete. Transparency must prevail over prestige, and public interest must finally outweigh the privileges of the well-connected.
Only then can we say we have truly confronted the legacy of Epstein—and dismantled the elite machinery that allowed him to thrive.