In the theater of modern politics, denial has become the press’s most reliable instrument. When explosive allegations surface — whether about Epstein, foreign influence, or presidential compromise — the reflex is immediate: “no evidence.” This phrase, repeated with ritualistic certainty, does more than protect journalistic caution; it functions as a shield for power itself. By dismissing suspicion before investigation, the media transforms absence into assurance, turning silence into the loudest defense in the room.
Candace Owens, Epstein, and the Politics of Silence
Right-wing commentator Candace Owens has once again stirred controversy, this time by alleging that Israel is “blackmailing” President Donald Trump in connection with the recently released trove of Jeffrey Epstein documents. The files, published by lawmakers, contain repeated references to Trump, prompting Owens to declare on X:
“They are blackmailing President Donald Trump in broad daylight. The slow release of the emails is intentional. Now he will give them whatever they want.”
She later clarified her accusation:
“For those who struggle with context clues, THEY = Israel, who Jeffrey Epstein worked for. This is how our nation is run.”
Mainstream outlets were quick to dismiss her remarks, noting that no independent evidence currently supports her claim. Yet the swiftness of that dismissal raises its own questions.
Owens is voicing what many Americans quietly suspect: that Trump is entangled in webs of foreign leverage. But Trump is not the only politician. Biden, the Clintons, Obama — names that surface again and again in whispers of influence and compromise are also part of it. The suggestion is not that evidence is absent, but that evidence is designed to remain absent. After all, espionage has two cardinal rules: never get caught, and if caught, disappear to protect the mission. Epstein’s fate, viewed through this lens, looks less like coincidence and more like compliance.
The media’s role in this saga is equally troubling. Rather than investigate the plausibility of Owens’ claims, publishers rushed to the safety of denial. “No evidence,” they repeat, as though the absence of proof is proof of absence. But in matters of intelligence and blackmail, silence is the evidence. The slow drip of documents, the carefully timed leaks, the convenient deaths — these are the fingerprints of power operating in shadows.
Owens may be reckless in her phrasing, but her accusations strike at a nerve: the uneasy suspicion that American politics is less about governance and more about leverage. Whether or not Israel is the puppeteer, the strings are visible. And the silence of the press, far from neutral, becomes complicity.
Historical precedents in compromise and control
Cold war kompromat and modern echoes
The playbook Owens invokes — compromising material held in reserve and deployed selectively — has precedent. Soviet-era kompromat targeted officials and dissidents; the point was not courtroom-quality evidence but behavioral control. The lesson travels: power cares less about legal proof than dependable pressure.
Domestic intelligence and “plausible deniability”
From COINTELPRO to classified briefings that never see daylight, the American state has long balanced surveillance and politics under the banner of “plausible deniability.” The machine prefers insinuation over indictment because control is cleaner than conflict. In that context, “no evidence” is not exculpatory; it is operational.
Foreign influence operations
Whether you cite the Cambridge Five in Britain, the Stasi’s patient cultivation in East Germany, or post–cold war oligarchic networks, the pattern holds: elite proximity breeds opportunity for leverage. Allegations involving Israel, Russia, China — or any intelligence-capable state — are less about national stereotypes and more about structural incentives: sensitive information plus high stakes equals temptation.
Epstein as a symbol: the utility of silence
Epstein has become the modern Rorschach of elite compromise: money, proximity to power, a trail of insinuations, and a grave that guarantees silence. The paradox is brutal. If evidence exists, its value increases by remaining hidden. If no evidence exists, silence performs the same function. Either way, the public experiences the same effect: partial disclosures, selective outrage, and timed releases that feel more curated than accidental.
Media dynamics: speed, certainty, and the vacuum they create
- Incentive to dismiss: “No evidence” shields outlets from liability and backlash.
- Asymmetric information: Intelligence-adjacent claims are the hardest to verify and the easiest to weaponize.
- Narrative control: Slow releases schedule public attention. A leak is not just a fact; it is a calendar entry.
When coverage rewards fast certainty over slow rigor, the vacuum fills with suspicion. That suspicion may be wrong on particulars and right about the pattern: when power has incentives to hide, journalism’s speed collides with truth’s pace.
The mechanics of leverage: how control works without proof
- Access beats accusation: Access to decision-making is more valuable than a scandal.
- Ambiguity is a tool: Ambiguity keeps targets compliant because they do not know what could surface.
- Timing is pressure: Timing of revelations moves votes, appointments, or diplomatic gestures.
- Intermediaries matter: Cut-outs and proxies provide deniability and disperse risk.
The most effective form of pressure isn’t public — it’s anticipatory. People change decisions to avoid outcomes that never need to occur.
A disciplined standard: how serious scrutiny would proceed
- Separate claim from context: Label Owens’s allegation as commentary and evaluate independently.
- Follow the money: Map financial flows, shell entities, and legal settlements surrounding key actors.
- Study the cadence: Analyze timing patterns in document releases against political events.
- Interrogate gatekeepers: Identify custodians of archives and their institutional interests.
- Cross-examine silence: Document who benefits from unresolved ambiguity versus disclosure.
None of this proves the charge. It tests the system that makes the charge plausible.
Denial as narrative management
- Speed over scrutiny: Newsrooms operate on deadlines, not dossiers. The fastest way to neutralize a volatile claim is to declare it unsupported.
- Authority signaling: By invoking “no evidence,” media outlets align themselves with officialdom, projecting credibility while avoiding investigative risk.
- Agenda control: Denial sets the frame. Once the phrase is deployed, the burden shifts to the accuser to prove, rather than the institution to probe.
In this way, denial is not passive—it actively shapes the boundaries of discourse.
Historical echoes
- Watergate (1972): Early coverage leaned on official denials until the evidence became overwhelming. The delay was not accidental; denial bought political breathing room.
- Iran-Contra (1980s): “No evidence” was the refrain until congressional hearings forced acknowledgment.
- Weapons of mass destruction (2003): Denial and certainty were wielded interchangeably, both serving to justify policy until reality intervened.
Each case shows denial as a tactical instrument: not to resolve truth, but to manage time and perception.
The mechanics of denial
- Language as armor: Phrases like “no evidence” or “unsubstantiated” are deliberately vague. They do not mean false; they mean unproven.
- Silence as complicity: By refusing to investigate, media outlets transform absence into protection.
- Public psychology: Audiences often conflate “no evidence” with “no possibility,” which is precisely the point.
Denial is not about accuracy — it is about inoculation.
Why denial works
- It is safe: Denial avoids libel, backlash, and reputational risk.
- It is efficient: A single phrase can close a story before it opens.
- It is contagious: Once one outlet deploys denial, others echo it, creating a chorus of certainty.
The result is a manufactured consensus: not that the claim is false, but that it is untouchable.
Owens’s allegation may be reckless, but the media’s reflex is equally revealing. Denial is not neutral—it is a political act disguised as caution. It protects power by delegitimizing suspicion, and it weaponizes silence by turning it into certainty. In this theater, the press does not merely report; it performs. And the performance of denial is one of the most effective instruments of control in modern politics.
In a world built on leverage, the truth is not what gets published; it’s what changes behavior before publication. And in that world, silence isn’t neutral — it’s the loudest instrument in the orchestra.