The death of American integrity |
Over the course of the past twenty-five years or so, we Americans have borne witness again and again to once respected institutions covering up child molestation and protecting the perpetrators. The Catholic Church, Penn State, Michigan State University, and now our Secretary of Labor, when he was Miami's top federal prosecutor, have all erred on the side of money and not on the side of children.
For those not aware, in 2007 Alex Acosta (our current Labor Secretary) issued a more than lenient sentence (13 months) to billionaire Jeffrey Epstein who was facing life imprisonment for numerous instances of sex with underage girls (some still in middle school) as well as being suspected of sex trafficking girls from overseas. Nobody seems to know why Acosta cut such a pathetic deal (a good guess would be something to do with the billions of dollars Epstein is worth plus the many notable men--including Donald Trump and Bill Clinton--who may have been involved with Epstein's perversions but as of yet have remained anonymous), but two of his victims are now suing to have the plea overturned.
Can someone explain to me what I am missing here? We are talking the rape of children, and yet what does it say about America when the real estate holdings of the Church or the athletic programs of universities or the comfort of a billionaire all supersede the lifetime trauma of a child? The punishments issued in all of these cases are a mere piddling compared to what the children have suffered.
Have we become that desensitized to the power of money?
Because if we have, it's not a slippery slope we are descending. We have already struck rock bottom.
Fuck Donald Trump,
emaycee
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