Thursday, December 25, 2025

Justice Department’s heavy-handed redactions leave no one happy in the 'Epstein files' saga

 

Issues & Insights

Just can’t win:Justice Department’s heavy-handed redactions leave no one happy in the 'Epstein files' saga   "Thousands of (Jeffrey Epstein) files still aren’t public. The redactions are extensive, at times going beyond what was called for in the law passed by Congress last month.

"The Justice Department said it made the decision on its own to withhold information in the files under executive branch and legal privileges, to be extremely cautious not to expose victims, and to re-release files that had been redacted previously by the federal government under broader guidelines before the law was passed.

"In the past four days, the approach has put the Trump administration, and especially its leadership at the Justice Department, on the defensive. Inside the Justice Department headquarters, lawyers are still scrambling to correct mistakes made in redacting files and working through thousands more documents that still aren’t available, according to sources familiar with the work and statements DOJ leadership have made since Friday.

"And despite their efforts to defend the work of hundreds of lawyers working through the Epstein records, the Justice Department’s leadership hasn’t been able to silence critics from all corners who now say they aren’t being transparent enough.
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"Criticism of the Justice Department for failing to be transparent with its Epstein records has dogged the department’s leadership throughout Trump’s second term. Bondi was previously panned for touting transparency while re-releasing records that were already in the public sphere.
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"The Epstein files released Friday contain hundreds of photos that hadn’t previously been seen, as well some grand jury and interview transcripts that were previously secret and a few other notable filings and internal files.

"But by and large, the massive and incomplete trove posted on the Justice Department’s website comprised of records that people could have already found — if they knew where to look.

"In many ways, a primary audience for the Epstein files’ release has been an increasingly wide swath of the public, representing both conservatives and liberals across the country, especially those who are active online.

"Attempts by Trump officials to defend the release on social media were met with sharp rebuttals. Users on X added “community notes,” flagging inaccuracies, to at least 13 posts from official Justice Department accounts or Bondi and Blanche’s accounts.

"The community notes feature on X allows users to add fact-checks or context underneath posts that are misleading. If a critical mass of other users gives the note a positive rating, it will be permanently attached to the original post.

"Bondi and Blanche have posted a combined five times on X since the Epstein files dropped on Friday, and every post drew a community note.

"In one post, Bondi said, “President Trump is leading the most transparent administration in American history.” In response to this and other claims, a community note stated that the Epstein drop was “full of redactions and deleted pages” and that images of Trump “were removed … to protect him.' ” . . .

When a Christian Professional Is Punished for His Faith

  Dr Rich Swier  

Professional licensing bodies, originally created to ensure competence and protect consumers, are increasingly used to enforce ideological conformity.

"And What One Quiet Victory in Montana Signals Nationwide. 

For four years,r expect to face.

Not because he mistreated a client.

Not because he violated real estate law.

Not because of anything he did in his professional work.

Huber, a pastor and licensed Realtor in Montana, was targeted because of a religious sermon, and someone decided that sermon should cost him his livelihood.

The case began in 2021, when Huber’s church ended its partn Brandon Huber lived under a shadow most Americans neveership with a local food bank after discovering LGBTQ-themed materials in children’s lunch bags.

Huber publicly explained the decision, calmly and explicitly, as a matter of biblical conviction. He also made clear that the church would continue feeding children through its own program.

That explanation was labeled “hate speech.”

A third party, not a client and not connected to any real estate transaction, filed a complaint with the Missoula Organization of Realtors, alleging Huber had violated the Realtors’ ethics code.

Local officials agreed, even though the speech occurred entirely outside his work as a Realtor.

The consequences were severe.

Huber was fined $5,000.

He was ordered to complete diversity training, which he declined.

When he did not comply, his access to the MLS database was revoked.

For more than four years, he was effectively locked out of his profession." . . More...

Get Christ Out of Christmas? Atheists Gets Their Tinsel in a Twist When Sarah Huckabee Sanders Refuses

 Twitchy

"We closed state offices so families could spend time together at Christmas. Some people objected, and told us we had to strip the holiday of its meaning - the birth of Christ. We declined." Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders
The anti-Newsom remedy

 "Arkansas Governor Sarah Huckabee Sanders was feeling the Christmas spirit this week as she gave state employees a generous gift. She announced she would be closing state offices on Friday, December 26th, extending a nice four-day weekend to the state's employees to spend with their families and celebrate the birth of Jesus.

"The birth of Jesus? She can't say that! She's a governor.

"At least according to the Scrooges at the Freedom from Religion Foundation (FFRF), an atheist nonprofit organization that, in their words, works to keep state and church separate.

"Sarah's e-mail really got the agitated atheist's tinsel in a twist.

How dare she say 'Giving thanks for Christ's birth' on a holiday that celebrates Christ's birth!

"The angry elves at FFRF couldn't let this stand, and they jumped into action, pounced, if you will. They sent a letter to the Governor demanding that she rescind the statement, claiming it violated the First Amendment's Establishment Clause. Going even further, they demanded that she no longer use her office to promote 'Christian Mythology' as truth.

"We're sure that sounded good in their grinchy little minds, and they surely thought complaining about giving employees a paid day off was a good idea. Heck, they may even believe the Establishment Clause spin they were peddling. Zelots often believe their own BS, and it is BS.

"Sanders is under no obligation to suppress or deny her religious beliefs while she is in office. If she had given Christian employees a paid day off and forced others to work, the lunkheads at FFRF would have had a point. We'd like to believe that they just misunderstood that the Establishment Clause is intended to protect the church from the government, not the other way around." . . . More...

Christmas Eve With J.R.R. Tolkien

 Amy Curtis

 "As Tate says, the letters showed how Tolkien's mind worked and his creative storytelling process. It was a glimpse into the groundwork that would become 'The Lord of the Rings.' "


"It's Christmas Eve, and kids around the world are waiting for the magical moment when Father Christmas, Santa Claus himself, shows up and leaves presents underneath the tree. There's a joy in that anticipation that cannot be described.

"For British author J.R.R. Tolkien, professor and author, the magic of Christmas took form in the shape of illustrated stories and letters from Father Christmas, each complete with a North Pole stamp designed by Tolkien.
"The first North Pole stamp cost "two kisses" and was given to Tolkien's three-year-old son, John.
"The card inside featured a man in a red coat with the caption "Me" and the picture of a snow-covered, domed structure captioned "My House."
"For the next two decades, Tolkien kept up this tradition. The letters contained stories of life at the North Pole with Father Christmas, his Polar Bear assistant, and many other characters.
"As Tate describes them, they weren't simply letters. "They were miniature works of art and storytelling." . . .  Much more here...

When the Churches Go Silent at Christmas

"Why Christianity endures while Europe locks its church doors."

The American Spectator  

"The Islamists alone did not crush Christmas in Western Europe. They had plenty of help from the secular Left. From people the Muslims would toss off rooftops or veil once they took full power."

"Even in a deeply cynical time, Christmas remains the most joyous holiday of the year for most people, despite the communistic conspiracy against it — the Democratic Party, academia, the legacy news media, and the entertainment media. Because the concept of a Godsent male Savior come to Earth to save Man from sin demolishes their unsacred cows — the State as the supreme judge of morality, truth as a personal interpretation.

"This godless philosophy has destroyed Western Europe. The Christian faith that built its civilization and sustained it through a thousand years of darkness has been abandoned, hollowed. Consequently, the two forces Europe soundly defeated — Islam and Marxism — are now conquering it with little resistance, enabled by the nations’ leaders.

"Induced violence. In Germany, for instance, the beloved Christmas markets, the Weihnachtsmärkte, were scrubbed this year. Evil feeds on fear, and removing a spiritual counter to it only hastens its advance.

"Many Christmases ago, I took my first weeklong vacation from USA Today to visit a girlfriend, Jenny, in Dijon, France, where she was studying at the Centre International d’Études Françaises. One chilly night, we left her dorm to take a stroll around the town. Bypassing a small vintage church, we heard the most beautiful violin version of Arcangelo Corelli’s Christmas Concerto (Concerto grosso in G minor, Op. 6, No. 8 [1714]) emanating from within. The door was unlocked, and we went inside.

"The pews were empty. But on the stage stood nine young musicians in angelic white — six girls on string instruments, three men on horns, and their conductor — obviously rehearsing for a special event. On this night, however, Jenny and I were the whole audience, and we sat there for maybe an hour, enchanted and enthralled, aware we were enjoying something special.

"Jenny died of cancer around eight years ago. Her sister Caroline gave me the sad news,  adding one tidbit. For many years before she passed, Jenny often brought up that magical night in a little French church as the most wonderful of her life. That made me happy, if now melancholic. For a memory such as Jenny and I enjoyed will be shared by no one else ever again.

"Odds are no church in France today would be trumpeting classical Christian music out to the night for fear of the Moors. The church door would be locked, perhaps permanently. That is if it were not now one of the dozen new mosques built this century in Dijon, where only one stood in 1990." . . .

“Our Kwanzaa celebrations are one of my favorite childhood memories,” gushed Kamala Harris in 2020. “The whole family would gather around across multiple generations and we’d tell stories and light the candles.” That’s a story all right. Kwanzaa was created in 1966, Harris in 1964, and the Kwanzaa con didn’t catch on till the 1980s."