Jeffrey Epstein was not only a rapist and a child
predator, but also — wait for it — a White supremacist. While some speculate
that the Epstein issue is just a distraction from President Trump’s virulent
and endless racism, others feel that the video the president posted at the beginning of Black History Month
of Barack and Michelle Obama as apes was meant to divert attention from the
growing Epstein fallout.
Well, as it turns out, the two crises are not as far
apart as you might imagine. Bombshell articles in The Atlantic, Mother Jones, and at MS Now pulled the covers off Jeffrey Epstein’s
noxious racism.
Reporters culling the most recently released Epstein
files discovered numerous pieces of evidence in emails and other documents
suggesting that he advocated the faux “science” of racial eugenics and held
racist views not distinct from those promoted for decades by Donald Trump.
Epstein built (or at least tried to build) ties and
develop friendships with some of the most notorious eugenicists and White
nationalists around the globe, including Nobel Prize laureate and geneticist
James Watson, political scientist Charles Murray, and artificial intelligence
researcher Joscha Bach, among many others. He also circulated posts from White
supremacist websites that promoted bogus, supposedly genetically based intellectual differences between the races.
Eugenics is the “race science” that was developed in
the latter part of the nineteenth century to justify European slavery and
colonialism. Proponents contended that humans were biologically and genetically
separated into distinctly unequal “races.” Everything from intelligence,
criminality, and attractiveness to morality was, so the claim went, genetically
determined.
It should surprise no one that, in such an imagined
hierarchy, Whites were at the top and, in most configurations, people of
African descent at the very bottom with Asians and indigenous people somewhere
in-between. Those four (or five or six) categories were considered immutable.
And it mattered remarkably little that, for a long time, social and natural
scientists had overwhelmingly argued with irrefutable evidence that racial
categories were social constructs invented by humans and distinctly malleable over
time as political and social life changed.
The real-world impact of racial eugenics theory long
shaped public policy, political status, and life opportunities. In the United
States, a belief in the genetic inferiority of Blacks helped foster slavery and
then Jim Crow segregation, and led to tens of thousands of African Americans,
Latinos, Native Americans, and individuals with physical and mental
disabilities, as well as prisoners being sterilized. By 1913, 24 states and
Washington, D.C., had passed laws allowing enforced sterilization. President Theodore Roosevelt was a firm
believer in such eugenics and supported sterilization in order to prevent what
he termed “racial suicide,” a perspective that echoes today’s “Great Replacement Theory.”
In Nazi Germany, eugenics led not only to the
sterilization of Jews, Blacks, and the disabled, but to the state-organized
mass murder of literally millions of people. It was a core tenet of
Nazism that all non-Aryans were genetically inferior and a threat to the White
race. The Nazis railed against Jews “poisoning the blood” of White Germans, a term Trump used in
describing non-White immigrants from the global South. Despite this history,
Epstein came to deeply believe in eugenics and genetic determination, as has
Donald Trump. To that end, Epstein sought to connect with the notable race
theorists of his day.
Epstein on Race
Perhaps the most notorious book in the modern era
advocating a racial basis for intelligence and a social hierarchy that places
Whites on top and Blacks at the bottom was The Bell Curve by Charles Murray and the late
Richard J. Herrnstein, published in 1994. Since then, in multiple books and articles, the research behind that book has
been thoroughly debunked and overwhelmingly rejected by scholars in the social
and natural sciences.
Yet, at the time, many Republicans and some Democrats
embraced its racist argument in order to contend that government welfare
programs should be cut back. Murray aligned with Republicans in giving testimony to Congress in the 1990s that blamed the
morality of poor people for their poverty (as a debate unfolded around the
future of welfare programs).
According to the Epstein files, Epstein himself repeatedly tried to
correspond with Murray. However, Murray claims he never received (or remembers
receiving) any emails from Epstein and did not correspond with him. Regardless,
it’s pretty clear that Epstein was writing because of Murray’s notoriety for
his work on race and genetics. This was in 2018, more than a decade after The
Bell Curve had been published and Murray had become famous for it.
Epstein, according to The Atlantic, was reportedly provided with Murray’s
email address by James Watson. He and Francis Crick had, of course, discovered
the structure of DNA in 1953. Nine years later, they and
Maurice Wilkins won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine.
Around 2000, Watson’s regressive views on race began to
surface. That year, he told an audience that “dark-skinned people have stronger
libidos,” leaning into a centuries-old racial stereotype. In 2007, according to
a former assistant in the London Sunday Times, he said that he was “inherently
gloomy about the prospect of Africa” because “all our social policies are based
on the fact that their intelligence is the same as ours — whereas all the
testing says not really.”
Epstein also had ties to a number of other researchers
and scientists, including Joscha Bach, who received funding from the convicted felon and
was hired at MIT’s Media Lab with his help.
In one exchange in 2016, Bach wrote to Epstein, stating that African American
children “have slower cognitive development” and “are slower at learning
high-level concepts.” With the release of those files in January, Bach tried to
explain why his statements were not racist and that “scientific discussion
about the heritability of traits… [is] very complicated and not my area of
research.”
Epstein also spent time on hardcore White supremacist
websites. For example, he sent a link to a racist article entitled “Race and
IQ: Genes That Predict Racial Intelligence Differences” to left-wing scholar
Noam Chomsky. The article came from the outright White supremacist website the
Right Stuff, according to The Atlantic. Chomsky, over email, expressed his
disagreement with Epstein about race science.
According to the Guardian, Chomsky had a “close friendship” with
Epstein. There is no evidence that Chomsky participated in or witnessed any of
Epstein’s sex crimes, and Valeria Chomsky, his wife, admitted that the couple
made “serious errors in judgment” in maintaining ties to him. While the statement vigorously denounced Epstein’s offences,
there was, however, no mention of his racist behavior, which few focused on in
all those years.
The “Great Gene” President
Epstein’s eugenicist views are in line with the
longstanding genetic determinism of Trump. There is no bigger racist science
believer than the current occupant in the White House. For decades, he has
bragged about his genetic superiority relative to the rest of humanity. The
examples are endless:
“Well, I think I was born with the drive for success because
I have a certain gene. I’m a gene believer.”
“You have to have the rights — the right genes.”
“Do we believe the gene thing? I mean I do.”
“I have great
genes and all that stuff which I’m a believer in.”
And, of course, in opposition to Trump’s “right genes”
are those with the wrong kind. From the president’s perspective that would, of
course, include migrants. In an interview discussing them, he opined, “You know, now a
murderer — I believe this — it’s in their genes. And we got a lot of bad genes
in our country right now.”
Over the years, Trump has also shown little empathy for
individuals with disabilities. He famously mocked reporter Serge Kovaleski, who has
arthrogryposis that affects his joints, by twisting and contorting his body to
make fun of him. He also reportedly did not want to be around physically disabled
soldiers, according to his former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly.
Trump often speaks with a strategic ambiguity so that he
can later deny that he was disparaging migrants, people with disabilities, or
wounded soldiers. He fools no one.
It’s notable that one of Trump’s go-to insults is to call
someone “low IQ,” and in nearly every case, his target turns
out to be a Black person and disproportionately female ones, including his
opponent in election 2024 Kamala Harris and Congressional Representatives
Maxine Waters, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Al Green, Jasmine Crockett, House
minority leader Hakeem Jeffries, radio host Charlamagne the God, and New York
Attorney General Letitia James among others.
Trump has been careful, at least publicly, to not
explicitly say that Black people are genetically predisposed to criminality.
However, he has endlessly attacked Black-led cities as crime zones, without
ever labeling White-dominated cities or states the same way. He also
posted fake data supposedly demonstrating that African
Americans commit crimes at a higher rate (with the clear implication that race
is the driving factor).
His eugenicist views are most manifest in his immigration
policies and dreams. Theoretically, he is not able to run for president again,
so he has little incentive to hide his true feelings. After spending years
denying it, in December 2025, he proudly admitted that he had referred to
nations in Latin America and Africa as “shithole” countries back in 2018. In a
December 9, 2025, speech in Pennsylvania, he plugged for White — and
implicitly White only — immigration to this country:
“Remember I said that to the senators that came in, the
Democrats. They wanted to be bipartisan. So they came in. And they said, ‘This
is totally off the record, nothing mentioned here, we want to be honest,’
because our country was going to hell. And we had a meeting. And I say: Why is
it we only take people from shithole countries, right? Why can’t we have some
people from Norway, Sweden – just a few – let us have a few. From Denmark – do
you mind sending us a few people?”
In January 2026, Trump essentially halted almost all
refugees coming from Africa. The administration stated that it would
admit only 7,500 total refugees from around the world in
2026, the lowest number on record. This meant near zero for Black Africans.
At the same time, the Trump administration sought
to process 4,500 White South African refugee applications
per month starting in January. The president also issued Executive Order 4204 in February 2025 falsely,
claiming that Whites in South Africa were being mistreated and deserved an
expedited process to become permanent residents of the United States. The new
target, contained in a previously unreported document from the State Department
dated January 27th and reviewed by Reuters, signals a push to ramp up admissions from South
Africa, while refugee applications from other areas have been severely
curtailed.
Racial genetics is Trump’s defining worldview (full
stop!). That he thinks of Barack and Michelle Obama as less than human should
surprise no one who has followed his statements on race over the decades. A
compilation of Trump’s views on the former president over all these years boils
down to this: Barack Obama is an ape-like radical Muslim (founder of ISIS), and socialist who was not
born in the United States but engineered a conspiracy involving thousands to
pretend that he was (or maybe he actually was), then fraudulently assumed the presidency and now
should be arrested for treason and illegally
spying on the Trump White House, and no matter what your eyes and
brain tell you, he is not as mentally and physically healthy as I am.
Beginning in the early 1950s, real science, as opposed to
the fraudulent versions embraced by Epstein and Trump, was able to make
life-changing breakthroughs as a result of access to what became known as HeLa
cells. Those cells would be responsible for understanding and creating vaccines
and treatment for polio, cancer, HPV, Parkinson’s, measles, HIV, mumps, Zika,
and Covid 19, among other diseases. They would lead to the creation of the
field of virology.
It is highly unlikely (and would likely have been
mortifying) that either Epstein knew, or Trump knows, that those cells came
from an African American woman named Henrietta Lacks. They were cynically named
HeLa, combining the first two letters of her first and last names.
In 1951, when she was admitted to Johns Hopkins hospital
in Baltimore, deadly ill with cervical cancer, cell tissues were taken from her
body without her or her family’s permission. That unethical theft — legal at
the time — would lead to countless billions in profits for pharmaceutical
corporations.
After the publication of Rebecca Skloot’s book The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks in 2010,
her story became well known and family-initiated lawsuits proceeded. In 2023,
the family reached a settlement with Thermo Fisher Scientific, and, in February 2026, another
settlement with Novartis, a Switzerland-based pharmaceutical mammoth.
Trump is easily the most intellectually incurious,
ill-informed, unread, vacuous, and petulant president in U.S. history. He will
never acknowledge — or even understand — that his rise to power was not due to
his having any extraordinary talents, skills, or genetically based genius. It
was, without qualification, the result of a lifetime of perpetual race, gender,
and class privilege.
Clarence Lusane is an author, activist, scholar,
and journalist. He is a professor and former Chairman of Howard University’s
Department of Political Science. He is author of many books. His latest is Twenty
Dollars and Change: Harriet Tubman and the Ongoing Fight for Racial Justice and
Democracy.
-Clarence Lusane, CounterPunch