The Missing Voices in the Epstein Files' Media Commentary: Sexual Assault Prevention Educators
As pundits dissect elite corruption, theyve largely sidelined the experts who understand the deeper cultural roots of sexual exploitation and male peer complicity.
Epstein abuse survivor Danielle Bensky hugs Sky Roberts, brother of Virginia Giuffre, on Feb. 10, 2026, in Washington, D.C. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) introduced Virginias Law, legislation to eliminate the statute of limitations that Schumer argues has shielded traffickers and denied survivors their day in court. (Heather Diehl / Getty Images)
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But mens violence against women is not an elitist crime. Its a pervasive societal problem that transcends the categories of socioeconomics, ethnicity, race and region. Its a problem in red states and blue, in big urban centers and small rural towns. It happens in the private sphere of relationships and the family, as well as out in public: on the streets, public transportation and the workplace.
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Feminists have warned about the dangers of sexualizing young girls for decades. In fact, in 2008, the same year that Jeffrey Epstein pleaded guilty in Florida to procuring a child for prostitution, two mainstream books were published on this very topic: So Sexy, So Soon: The New Sexualized Childhood and What Parents Can Do to Protect Their Kids by Diane E. Levin and Jean Kilbourne, and The Lolita Effect: The Media Sexualization of Young Girls and What We Can Do About It by M. Gigi Durham.
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But theres a big difference between appropriate expressions of compassion, empathy and gratitude for survivors, and a clear-eyed analysis of the ways in which cultural misogyny is the necessary backdrop to the nefarious behavior committed or tolerated by the numerous men named in the files. Its the latter analysis that largely has been missing.
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When was the last time, for example, that you heard a sexual assault prevention educator interviewed in the media, and asked to comment about similarities and differences in the dynamic between men in the groups with whom they work, and those in Epsteins social network?
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https://msmagazine.com/2026/02/19/epstein-men-protect-experts-masculinity-male-peer-complicit-sexual-assault/
SheltieLover
(78,853 posts)Angela Rose, SA survivor & founder of P.A.V.E. spoke at my university, but her focus is on making women aware & working with survivors, not the transgenerational cesspool we have today.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angela_Rose#:~:text=Rose%20was%20approached%20from%20behind,change%20back%20into%20her%20clothes.
niyad
(130,938 posts)misogynist, patriarchal system address the root causes of how epstein and company even existed, let alone flourished. Instead, regardless of the number of people involved, they are all being treated like "lone wolves", each operating in their own little univers, seperately guilty. So much easier than looking at social structures and systems that devalue, and actively hate, females.
Can't address toxic masculinity. Might hurt their little fefes.