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Almost five years ago in October 2020, Mother Jones published a lengthy article by writer and film maker Leland Nally which makes fascinating re-reading in the light of the most recent political arguments within MAGA over the ‘Epstein Files’.

https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2020/10/i-called-everyone-in-jeffrey-epsteins-little-black-book/

In the article the author tells the story of how he obtained a copy of Jeffrey Epstein’s ‘little black book’, parts of which first surfaced on the now defunct Gawker website in 2015. It’s  a 97 page contact book containing some 1571 names in all, with roughly 5,000 phone numbers, and several thousands of email addresses and home addresses.

Having obtained an unredacted PDF copy via 8chan, Leland Nally then sat down and systematically began dialling phone numbers, one after another, and documented the results

I made close to 2,000 phone calls total. I spoke to billionaires, CEOs, bankers, models, celebrities, scientists, a Kennedy, and some of Epstein’s closest friends and confidants. I sat on my couch and phoned up royalty, spoke to ambassadors, irritated a senior adviser at Blackstone, and left squeaky voicemails for what must constitute a considerable percentage of the world oligarchy.”

Many of the numbers were dead, others had changed hands, and some answered but hung up the moment they realised the caller was a journalist. A good few of the people who answered were astonished to discover that their contact details were in Epstein’s black book - they claimed that they either barely knew the man, or had only ever interacted with his close friend and confidante Ghislaine Maxwell. Epstein and his confidante Maxwell apparently ‘collected‘ people in the same way that a lepidopterist collects butterflies.

By far the most sinister and revealing aspect of this tale however, is what one of Epstein’s previously unknown sexual assault victims (referred to only as ‘Julie’) disclosed about his taste in literature:

“I asked him why he was like this,” she recalled, “and he said to me to read some book….He told me it influenced him to become wealthy.”

The book was The Man From O.R.G.Y., an obscure 1965 James Bond ripoff written by Theodore Mark Gottfried under the pen name of Ted Mark. It’s about a con man who travels the world under the guise of being a “sex researcher” in order to spy for the US government….

The novel is an unbearable horror show. It’s violent and grotesquely pornographic, containing toddler brothels and graphic details of children and infants being ceremonially raped and trained into sex slavery. The protagonist gets custody of such a slave from the US embassy–his fake research organization, O.R.G.Y, stands for Organization for the Rational Guidance of Youth. The girl tells him about being penetrated multiple times a day since age 3 as training for a life of sex slavery, as well as the brutal beatings that were part of her training. She tells him that girls enjoy being raped….

Julie didn’t know what the book was about, but she remembered the conversation well. “It was one of the last things we talked about….He said to me, ‘Read this book, and that will help you understand,’” Julie told me. “I never read it and don’t think I ever will.”

The book in question was in fact just the first of an entire series of over a dozen similar books, and a film spin-off a.k.a ‘The Real Gone Girls’  released in 1970.

https://www.goodreads.com/series/211187-the-man-from-o-r-g-y

Jeffrey Epstein it seems had the box-set, and used it as a life guide.

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