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In this episode of The Rule of Law Brief, Nate Charles examines the latest congressional release of Jeffrey Epstein’s emails — including Epstein’s own statement that Donald Trump “spent hours at my house” with one of the young women later identified as a trafficking victim.
Rather than focusing on the salacious details, this episode explores a far more dangerous dynamic: the deliberate “slow drip” strategy that numbs the public into indifference. Through controlled disclosure and incremental normalization, outrage becomes background noise. The moral baseline shifts.
What begins as horror ends in apathy — and that’s exactly the point.
I’m Nate Charles — an attorney and former Navy SEAL who writes and speaks about national security, rule of law, and the psychological machinery of propaganda. Subscribe for analysis that cuts past headlines and exposes how power shapes what we feel — and what we stop feeling.
By Nathan M. F. Charles — Former federal prosecutor and Navy SEAL officer; Managing Partner at Charles International Law.In this episode of The Rule of Law Brief, Nate Charles examines the latest congressional release of Jeffrey Epstein’s emails — including Epstein’s own statement that Donald Trump “spent hours at my house” with one of the young women later identified as a trafficking victim.
Rather than focusing on the salacious details, this episode explores a far more dangerous dynamic: the deliberate “slow drip” strategy that numbs the public into indifference. Through controlled disclosure and incremental normalization, outrage becomes background noise. The moral baseline shifts.
What begins as horror ends in apathy — and that’s exactly the point.
I’m Nate Charles — an attorney and former Navy SEAL who writes and speaks about national security, rule of law, and the psychological machinery of propaganda. Subscribe for analysis that cuts past headlines and exposes how power shapes what we feel — and what we stop feeling.