They said Trump wanted people to forget Epstein forever but now a strange birthday book may bring it all back
|Just when it seemed like the Epstein chapter was finally closing, a bizarre discovery has pulled Donald Trump’s name back into the shadows of one of the most disturbing stories of our time.

It started with something that almost sounds surreal: a birthday book. Not just any book — but one filled with private letters, messages, and old photos compiled for Jeffrey Epstein’s 50th birthday back in 2003. And among those alleged messages, scrawled beneath a sketch of a naked woman, was a note that ended with the words:
“Happy Birthday – and may every day bring you another delicious little secret.”
It was signed simply: Donald.
When the Wall Street Journal published the claim, Trump was quick to fight back. He called the letter fake, accused the press of slander, and threatened lawsuits. He wanted the world to believe it was all made up.
But then something unexpected happened.

The New York Times dropped another report. According to them, Trump’s name wasn’t just linked to the letter — it was on a list of people who contributed to Epstein’s birthday book. Suddenly, it wasn’t just about one strange, cryptic message anymore. It became a glimpse into a deeper, more unsettling connection — one that many believed had long dissolved into history, but now seemed to resurface with a haunting new relevance.
Ghislaine Maxwell, now serving a 20-year sentence for helping Epstein abuse young girls, reportedly curated the book. In her own introduction, she wrote about how much joy she took in gathering the photos and notes from Epstein’s circle of friends.
That book — that quiet, unsettling archive of a predator’s powerful friends — now sits in the hands of the Epstein estate. And Democratic Rep. Ro Khanna wants answers. He’s pushing for a subpoena to bring the book into the public eye, page by page.

So where does that leave Trump?
For now, he hasn’t directly addressed the latest claims about the contributor list. He’s holding the line — calling it all lies, blaming the media, and promising to sue. But the whispers are growing louder, and if that book ever sees the light of day, it could turn whispers into thunder.
Because sometimes, the past doesn’t stay buried. Sometimes, the things we’re told to forget are exactly the things we need to remember.