Joe Rogan, the podcaster who built a reputation on asking inconvenient questions, told listeners the Jeffrey Epstein files legitimately frightened him and described the people implicated as “literally demonic.” His blunt reaction cuts through the polite indifference of the elite media and confirms what hardworking Americans have suspected all along: something rotten is at the core of our institutions. This is the kind of raw honesty the press won’t give you.
The documents the Department of Justice released amount to millions of pages, and what’s coming out reads like a horror show — emails referencing torture videos and names that were redacted for reasons nobody in public can explain. That pattern of redaction is not merely bureaucratic discretion; it looks like a cover-up of the powerful protecting their own. If our government selectively shields names while pretending to protect victims, trust in Washington is rightly evaporating.
Rogan also revealed that his name appears in the files not as a participant but as someone who refused an introduction to Epstein, and he laughed off the suggestion that he would have any involvement. That revelation should quiet the gossip while spotlighting a far uglier problem: these files cast a shadow over figures who moved freely among the powerful and never answered for it. Americans deserve clarity, not conspiratorial innuendo or politically convenient silence from those in power.
Conservative outlets and independent journalists have been pushing this story because the mainstream will not; Benny Johnson’s coverage is part of a larger push to force transparency and demand that those who abused their wealth and influence be held accountable. We should applaud anyone who bluntly calls out the horrors in these documents and refuses to let the swamp smother the truth. This is not a partisan stunt; it is a test of whether America’s institutions still serve justice or merely protect privilege.
Patriots must now turn outrage into action: demand congressional hearings, insist on a real special counsel with the power to follow the money and the names, and refuse the media’s normalization of elite lawlessness. If we love this country, we cannot accept a two-tier justice system where the powerful skate and the powerless pay. Stand with those who push for full transparency and accountability until every redaction is explained and every victim’s voice is heard.
