7.15.25 ~ A Perspective On “the files” plus the usual checking in and other finds

 

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This is not my perspective but another anon’s insight.  Their perspective may just be right.  I disagree with number 4.  His base would absolutely support him saying the files are 100% legit.  Other than that, interesting….

(1) °♡✧*Ṡ𝙤ϻϻə𝖗 Ʈ𝗵уოе*✧♡° on X: “@TheInsiderPaper Well, this one is definitely going to cause even more of a stir today and I’m totally here for it because i see everything even more clearly now…. Who stands firm and who folds like paper. Who’s anchored in truth and who’s chasing headlines. Who’s built for final victory and” / X

The first rule of win club is there actually are rules and that is how we make order out of chaos

1. First Rule: Don’t Fall Into a Trap If Trump admitted, “Yeah, those files are real,” they’d turn around and use his own words to destroy him in court. It’s a legal setup. Anything he says can and will be used against him. Smart Play: He calls it fake, because the moment you call it fake, it’s impossible for enemies to trap you with it later. —

2. The Files Are Tainted Garbage Anyway The Epstein files you’re seeing now? Mostly trash mixed with truth. The real monsters? Still hidden. The public stuff? Rigged with fake names and lies on purpose, so that everyone looks guilty. Smart Play: Trump discredits the public dump, so when the real files come out later, it’s clean and impossible to dismiss. —

3. The “They Lie About Everything” Strategy His base trusts one thing: the media lies. So Trump rolls Epstein into the same bag as “Russia hoax,” “Ukraine hoax,” and every other BS story they pushed for years. Smart Play: His people instantly tune out any Epstein headline because they’ve been trained to say, “Fake news.” Keeps his base rock solid. —

4. Don’t Let the Movement Eat Itself If Trump said the Epstein files are 100% true, half his people would lose it, others would attack him, the media would have a meltdown, and the whole movement would turn into a civil war.

Smart Play: Call it a hoax, avoid the internal chaos, and keep the fight aimed at the real enemy. —

5. Save the Nuke for the End Game Trump isn’t denying everything forever—he’s just waiting for the right moment. The real Epstein dirt is kept off the public grid. When the timing is right, it’ll be released under Trump’s control, not by some corrupt court or media circus.

Smart Play: Hold the bomb, use it when it hurts enemies the most, not before. — PLAIN AND SIMPLE The Epstein circle is too big, it spans Democrats, Republicans, royals, global elites. The goal is not just to expose it, but to collapse the whole blackmail system, without destroying Trump’s own political survival. You can’t expose it all at once or the system implodes on your head. Controlled release, timed right, is how you win the war without getting taken out early. —

BOTTOM LINE It’s not weakness. It’s not betrayal. It’s not denial. It’s the smartest way to stay in the game, keep your power, and deliver the truth bomb when it actually counts. Trump doesn’t play checkers. He’s been playing long chess while everyone else is chasing headlines.

 

 

Ongoing optics.  Or something else.  Who knows.  If they are fake, why did house repubs block the release OF them?  If they are fake, why is Maxwell still in prison?  If they are fake why was the public told by Kash and Bondi and Bongino and Trump, etc. that they existed and would be released?

 

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Trump Says he Doesn’t Understand why his Supporters Want the Epstein Files, “Only Pretty Bad People, Including Fake News, Want to Keep Something Like that Going” – Says he’s Willing to Release “Credible Information” (VIDEO) | The Gateway Pundit | by Jordan Conradson

 

 

 

 

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This outlet also called 2025 “the year of the flood”:

Flash floods in NYC and the Mid-Atlantic; 2 killed in New Jersey

 

Scientist Warns of Possible Irreversible Tipping Point as Antarctica Ice Melts – La Voce di New York

 

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yup pretty much:

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National ID – Citizens’ Council For Health Freedom

 

 

Photography by Daniela Kokina

 

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Photography by Zuoranyi

 

Photography by Roberto Nickson

 

THIS

Photography by Josh Hild

 

I’d take my kiddo, step into a portal and time travel back to this in a heartbeat today.

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Ending on a beautiful note:

“My Boys Think We’re Camping—But They Don’t Know We’re Homeless
They’re still asleep right now. All three of them, piled together under that thin blue blanket like it’s the coziest thing in the world. I watch their chests rise and fall and pretend—for just a second—that this is a vacation.
We pitched the tent behind a rest stop just past the county line. Technically not allowed, but it’s quiet, and the security guy gave me a look yesterday that said he wasn’t gonna kick us out. Not yet.
I told the boys we were going camping. “Just us guys,” I said, like it was an adventure. Like I hadn’t sold my wedding ring three days earlier just to afford gas and peanut butter.
The thing is… they’re too little to know the difference. They think sleeping on air mattresses and eating cereal from paper cups is fun. They think I’m brave. Like I’ve got some kind of plan.
But truth is, I’ve been calling every shelter from here to Roseville and no one has a spot for four. The last place said maybe Tuesday. Maybe.
Their mom left six weeks ago. She said she was going to her sister’s. Left a note and half a bottle of Advil on the counter. I haven’t heard from her since.
I’ve been holding it together, barely. Washing up at gas stations. Making up stories. Keeping bedtime routines. Tucking them in like everything’s okay.
But last night… my middle one, Micah, mumbled something in his sleep. Said, “Daddy, I like this better than the motel.”
And that just about broke me.
Because he was right. And because I know tonight might be the last night I can pull this off.
Right after they wake up, I’ve got to tell them something.�Something I’ve been dreading.
And just as I started unzipping the tent—
Micah stirred. “Daddy?” he whispered, rubbing his eyes. “Can we go see the ducks again?”
He meant the ones at the pond near the rest stop. We’d gone the night before and he’d laughed harder than I’d heard in weeks. I forced a smile.
“Yeah, buddy. As soon as your brothers are up.”
By the time we packed up our few things and brushed teeth at the sink behind the building, the sun was already baking the grass. My youngest, Toby, held my hand and hummed quietly, while my oldest, Caleb, kicked rocks and asked if we’d go hiking today.
I was just about to tell them we couldn’t stay another night when I saw her.
A woman, maybe late sixties, was walking toward us with a paper bag in one hand and a giant thermos in the other. She wore a worn-out flannel shirt and had a long braid down her back. I figured she was going to ask if we were okay—or worse, tell us to move on.
Instead, she smiled and held out the bag.
“Morning,” she said. “You boys want some breakfast?”
The boys lit up before I could answer. Inside the bag were warm biscuits and boiled eggs, and the thermos held hot cocoa. Not coffee—cocoa. For them.
“I’m Jean,” she said, sitting down on the curb with us. “I seen you out here a couple nights now.”
I nodded, unsure what to say. I didn’t want pity. But her face didn’t show pity. Just… kindness.
“Used to be in a tough spot myself,” she added, like she could read my thoughts. “Wasn’t camping though. Slept in a church van for two months with my daughter back in ‘99.”
I blinked. “Really?”
“Yep. People passed us by like we were invisible. Figured I wouldn’t do the same.”
I didn’t know what came over me, but I told her the truth. About the motel. About the mom. About the shelters saying “maybe.”
She just listened, nodding slowly.
Then she said something I didn’t expect: “Come with me. I know a place.”
I hesitated. “Is it a shelter?”
“Nope,” she said. “It’s better.”
We followed her old sedan down a long gravel road, my hands gripping the wheel, heart pounding. I kept looking back at the boys, who were laughing at something Toby said, completely unaware we were chasing a miracle.
We pulled up to what looked like a farm. Fenced in, big red barn, a small white house, a couple goats in the yard. A sign on the gate read: The Second Wind Project.
Jean explained on the porch. It was a community—run by volunteers—offering short-term stays to families in crisis. No government red tape. No ten-page forms. Just people helping people.
“You’ll get a roof, some food, and time to get your feet under you,” she said.
I swallowed hard. “What’s the catch?”
“No catch,” she said. “Just gotta help out a bit. Feed the animals. Clean up. Maybe build something if you can.”
That night, we slept in a real bed. All four of us in one room, but with walls and light and a fan that hummed soft and steady. I tucked the boys in and sat on the floor and cried like a child.
The next week, I chopped wood, fixed a fence, and learned how to milk a goat. The boys made friends with another family staying there—a single mom with twin girls. They chased chickens, picked wild berries, and learned to say “thank you” with every meal.
One night, I sat with Jean on the porch. “How did you find this place?” I asked.
She smiled. “I didn’t. I built it. Started small. I was a nurse, had a little land left by my grandma. Decided I wanted to be someone’s signpost instead of just their memory.”
Her words stuck with me.
Two weeks turned into a month. By then, I’d saved up a little from doing odd jobs around town. A mechanic shop let me shadow their guys, and one day the owner, a wiry man named Frank, handed me a paycheck and said, “Come back Monday if you want more.”
We stayed at the farm for six more weeks. By then, I had a steady part-time job, enough to rent a tiny duplex on the edge of town. The rent was cheap because the floor slanted and the pipes groaned at night, but it was ours.
We moved in the day before school started.
The boys never asked why we left the motel or why we stayed in a tent. They just kept calling it “the adventure.” To this day, Micah tells people we lived on a farm and helped build a fence with goats watching.
But something happened three months after we moved.
One Sunday morning, I found an envelope tucked under the doormat. No name. Just Thank you written on the front.
Inside was a picture—an old one—of Jean, young, holding a baby on her hip, standing in front of the same barn. Behind it, a note in blocky handwriting:
“What you gave my mom, she gave to you. Please pay it forward when you can.”
I asked around, but no one knew who left it. Jean didn’t answer her phone anymore. When I drove back to the farm, it was empty. A handwritten sign hung on the gate: Resting Now. Help Someone Else. So that’s what I did.
I started picking up groceries for the older lady down the street. I fixed my neighbor’s leaky sink. I gave my old tent to a man who lost his job and didn’t know where to go.
One night, a guy knocked on our door—looked scared, had two little kids clinging to him. Said someone at the food pantry told him I might know a place.
I didn’t hesitate.
I made cocoa.
Let them sleep in our living room for the night.
That was the start of something new. I talked to the mechanic shop, and Frank agreed to take him on, same way he did for me. I called a few friends. Got them furniture, clothes, shoes for the kids.
And slowly… our home became someone else’s second wind.
I used to think rock bottom was the end.
Now I know, for some people, it’s the start.
We were never just camping.
But somehow, in losing everything, we found more than I could’ve imagined.
And every time I tuck my boys in now, I still hear Micah’s words.
“Daddy, I like this better.”
So do I, buddy. So do I.
Sometimes, the lowest place you land is exactly where you’re meant to grow.
If this story moved you even a little, please share it with someone who needs hope. You never know who’s camping tonight.”
– Someone’s Daddy

 

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Author: Victoria1111

Truthseeker. Philosopher. Commander of Freedom. Writer. Musician. Composer. Above all I Am A Creator.

One thought on “7.15.25 ~ A Perspective On “the files” plus the usual checking in and other finds”

  1. That’s a great compilation V. Inspired! The overview on Trump is relevant and strikes a chord of truth to my mind. I too- feel that a strategy is being employed. The “mishandling” and clumsy PR approach to the Epstein file release has resulted in a viral demand for disclosure–and greater awareness for the trafficking/pedophilia aspects. Fanning the flames of the Epstein file release has amplified the focus on content, and getting the ‘real dirt’ on the Epstein/Maxwell operation. Most of the media coverage has been lame and trashy tabloid fare….up until now. Also-just wished to thank you for posting the story written by the homeless parent, and how a child’s mind can make the best out of a desperate situation. Life is magical when fear is absent. How tragic and unnecessary all homelessness is–as Jeff Bezos hides in his $165 Million dollar mansion. When did homes become unaffordable for most human beings, anyhow?
    The memes are wonderful-especially the Seneca quote. Many blessings…

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