
"BILL MAHER: We can get back to the important business of government reading a dead pervert's emails. We're doing this again? Again, Epstein? Have you been following the Epstein story? I feel like I've seen this movie four times. Right, where they release it, and there's always more. So this week, Democrats release some damn, of course, each party's going to try to get the other one to say Trump is guilty or not."
"Republicans release their own stack of emails. Does everyone have emails? Thank you. When you get elected, they give you your security badge, the key to your office, and here's your box of Epstein files. They just release them endlessly. I mean, they're like, like Beatle tracks from the vaults. They just keep coming out, and out it never ends."
"Apparently, they said according to an AI study of this, I don't know why they had to use AI for this. I can use find on my computer and find somebody's name. But apparently, according to AI, Trump in Epstein's emails has mentioned 1,500 times. Trump doesn't talk about Trump that much. I mean, that's Wow. And And one of them says, now the president denies this. Let's be very clear about that litigation-wise"
An opening segment targeted President Donald Trump over troves of Jeffrey Epstein-related emails, mocking repeated disclosures and partisan trading of damaging material between parties. The releases were portrayed as endless archival drops, likened to 'Beatle tracks from the vaults,' and as routine as receiving a security badge and a box of Epstein files upon election. An AI study was cited claiming Trump was mentioned roughly 1,500 times in Epstein's emails, which drew skepticism about the utility of AI for such searches. The pattern of disclosures, denials from the president, and legal implications were emphasized as ongoing and repetitive.
Read at www.mediaite.com
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