Power, Desire, and the Abuse of Freedom
An AI portrait of Jeffrey Epstein and Marquis de Sade.
In the late eighteenth century, Europe was in upheaval. Monarchies were collapsing, revolutions were spreading, and Enlightenment thinkers were promoting reason, equality, and human dignity. It was in this charged atmosphere that the Marquis de Sade lived and wrote.
De Sade was not just a controversial thinker. He was repeatedly accused—and in several cases convicted—of serious abuse of vulnerable people, including coercion, violence, and the exploitation of young women and prostitutes. His writings did not merely describe cruelty; they celebrated it, presenting domination and suffering as legitimate forms of pleasure.
Even in an age that was questioning authority and tradition, this crossed a line. He spent long periods in prison. Society, however inconsistently, recognized that what he represented was not freedom, but a radical denial of human dignity.
Power Without Accountability
More than two centuries later, Jeffrey Epstein operated in a world of global elites—private jets, luxury properties, and access to political and scientific influence.
Epstein was not a theorist. His actions are documented in court cases and testimonies. He:
recruited, abused and traficked underage girls, often through a network of intermediaries
paid victims, normalizing exploitation as a transaction
maintained properties where abuse took place over extended periods
cultivated relationships with powerful individuals, some of whom continued to associate with him even after his conviction in 2008
This was not hidden in the shadows alone. Warning signs were visible. Yet access, status, and influence allowed him to continue for years.
The Same Logic, Different Language
What links de Sade and Epstein is not just what they did, but how their actions reflect a deeper mindset.
De Sade argued openly that:
moral limits are artificial
the strong have the right to dominate
empathy is weakness
Epstein never wrote this down, but his behavior followed the same logic. The systematic nature of his actions—organizing, paying, and repeating abuse—points to more than impulse. It suggests a belief that others exist to be used.
In both cases, human beings were reduced to objects:
for pleasure, for control, or for experimentation.
Epstein’s reported interest in genetic “improvement” adds another layer. It echoes older, dangerous ideas that some people are superior and entitled to shape the future of others.
A Necessary Judgment
It is tempting to respond to stories like these with cynicism—to say that all elites are corrupt, that morality is a façade, that nothing really changes.
But that reaction risks blurring something essential: not everything is the same, and not everything is acceptable.
What de Sade described and what Epstein practiced are not controversial lifestyles or boundary-pushing ideas. They are clear violations of human dignity:
coercion
exploitation of the vulnerable
abuse of power
De Sade was imprisoned because his actions and ideas were recognized as dangerous. Epstein was eventually arrested and exposed because, despite failures, there were still institutions and individuals willing to act.
That is the line that matters.
Freedom does not include the right to harm others.
Power does not justify exploitation.
Intelligence does not excuse abuse.
The comparison between these two men should not lead to fascination, but to clarity. Across centuries, the pattern is the same—and so must be the response: firm rejection.
Further Reading
Marquis de Sade – Justine
Neil Schaeffer – The Marquis de Sade: A Life
Julie K. Brown – Perversion of Justice: The Jeffrey Epstein Story
