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Why I Believe JD Vance Should Become the 48th President of the United States—Immediately

I. The Babysitter Analogy: How We Judge Moral Risk

Imagine this scenario.

If three out of every four people you know—your relatives, your neighbors, your coworkers, your friends—told you they believed that a male babysitter you employed knew who had raped dozens of underage teenage girls and failed to report those crimes to the authorities, would you continue to trust that babysitter with your own underage daughter?

Most people would answer no, without hesitation. Not because the babysitter had been convicted of a crime, but because the moral risk would be intolerable. Because when children are involved, inaction itself becomes disqualifying.

That moral intuition is not radical. It is foundational. And it applies with even greater force to the President of the United States.

According to a Reuters–Ipsos poll, approximately 75% of Americans now believe that President Donald Trump knew at least “something” about Jeffrey Epstein’s sexual abuse of underage girls. That belief—right or wrong—now defines the public’s assessment of Trump’s moral judgment.

What matters just as much is what is not in evidence.

There is no public record, and no claim by President Trump himself, that he ever reported Jeffrey Epstein to law enforcement for the sexual abuse of minors. No statement. No sworn testimony. No contemporaneous account. No documented warning to authorities.

That absence is the heart of the problem.
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II. Moral Responsibility Is Not Optional—Especially at the Top

In most U.S. states, teachers, doctors, social workers, and caregivers are mandatory reporters of suspected child abuse. Society imposes that duty because we recognize a hard truth: children cannot protect themselves, and silence enables predators.

A president is not exempt from moral law simply because he is powerful. If anything, the obligation runs in the opposite direction. Greater power creates greater responsibility, not less.

If a private citizen has a moral duty to report suspected child abuse, then a billionaire businessman—one with access to law enforcement, prosecutors, political leaders, and the media—has an extraordinary duty to act. And a president, entrusted with enforcing the laws of the United States, bears that duty at the highest possible level.

This is not about hindsight. It is not about legal technicalities. It is about a basic question of character:

What does a person do when he believes—or even suspects—that children are being raped?

The morally acceptable answers are limited. Silence is not one of them.
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III. What the Lack of Reporting Signals

To be clear: there is no public evidence that Donald Trump committed sexual crimes with Jeffrey Epstein. That is not the claim being made here.

The issue is something both simpler but still damning.

If President Trump knew something—as 75% of Americans now believe—and failed to report it, then that failure itself reflects a catastrophic lapse in moral judgment.

It suggests one of three possibilities:

1. He did not care enough to act.
2. He prioritized social, financial, or reputational interests over children’s safety.
3. He believed silence was safer than accountability.

None of these possibilities is compatible with the ethical standards required of a president.

And the damage is not abstract. Every year of silence means more victims. Every failure to alert authorities extends a predator’s reach. In crimes against children, delay is harm.
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IV. Public Evidence That Sharpens the Moral Question

The moral stakes outlined above are not theoretical. They are sharpened by publicly reported facts, sworn statements, and Trump’s own evolving explanations regarding his relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.

A. Long, Well-Documented Social Relationship

Multiple outlets have documented a 15-year social relationship between Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein, including frequent appearances together at parties, social events, and gatherings involving young women. This relationship included Epstein’s presence at Mar-a-Lago and Trump’s acknowledged familiarity with Epstein’s lifestyle.

Trump himself once remarked publicly that Epstein liked women “on the younger side.” While Trump has since minimized or denied the significance of that remark, its existence underscores that Epstein’s behavior was not invisible to those around him.

B. Trump’s Claimed Break With Epstein—and the Unanswered Question

President Trump has repeatedly stated that he barred Epstein from Mar-a-Lago, with the White House later saying this was done “for being a creep.” Trump has also said that he broke off relations after learning Epstein was taking women from the club.

But this explanation raises a profound and unavoidable question:

Why was Epstein considered a “creep”?

Trump has never explained what he knew, what he suspected, or what specific behavior triggered the ban. When asked directly why a convicted sex offender was taking women from his club, Trump said he did not know why—but also said he “didn’t like it” and “threw him out.”

That response is morally insufficient.

If a club owner learns that a member is recruiting or taking young women from the premises under suspicious circumstances, the responsible response is not merely expulsion—it is notification of authorities.

Throwing someone out protects the brand. Reporting them protects children.

C. Claims by Victims’ Families and Newly Released Evidence

The family of Virginia Giuffre—one of Epstein’s most prominent accusers—has publicly stated their belief that Donald Trump knew about Epstein’s conduct. While belief is not proof, such statements from victims’ families carry moral weight and reinforce public concern.

More recently, House Democrats released an email reported by The Washington Post that claimed Trump spent hours with an Epstein victim. Trump has denied wrongdoing, and he has not been accused of criminal conduct in connection with Epstein. That distinction matters—and should be respected.

But denial of wrongdoing is not the same as evidence of responsible action.

D. The Birthday Note Controversy—and What It Reveals

The Wall Street Journal reported that Trump gave Epstein a birthday note in 2003 that included a sketch of a naked woman and a cryptic reference to a “secret” the two men shared. Trump has denied writing the note and has filed a libel lawsuit challenging the report. The New York Times has not independently verified the story.

That dispute should be resolved by evidence and courts.

But even setting it aside entirely, it does not answer the central question of this essay:

At any point, did Donald Trump report suspected child sexual abuse to authorities?

There is still no evidence that he did.

As Republican Senator Howard Baker asked during the Watergate hearings, "What did the president know and when did he know it?"
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V. The Core Question That Will Not Go Away

Trump has never been charged of wrongdoing in the Epstein case. He has said he had “no idea” Epstein was abusing young women. He has said he threw Epstein out of his club. He has said Epstein was a “creep.”

Yet he has never explained:

• What he believed Epstein was doing
• When he suspected it
• Why suspicion did not trigger a report to law enforcement

And until that gap is filled, the moral judgment remains unavoidable.

If you know—or suspect—that children are being abused, you do not just walk away.

You report it.

That is the standard we demand of teachers, parents, and ordinary citizens.

It is the bare minimum we should demand of a president.
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VI. Fitness for Office Is About Trust, Not Just Legality

Presidents are not only legal actors; they are moral stewards. The Constitution does not require criminal conviction to remove a president from office. It requires judgment—by Congress—about whether the president can still be trusted with power.

A president who plausibly failed to report the serial sexual abuse of minors cannot credibly claim the moral authority to:

• Enforce laws protecting children
• Appoint judges to interpret those laws
• Command federal law enforcement
• Represent the nation’s values to the world

This is why impeachment exists. Not to punish crimes alone, but to protect the public from unfitness.
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VII. Why This Leads—Reluctantly—to JD Vance

Let me be absolutely clear:

The thought of JD Vance as President of the United States absolutely disgusts me.

I disagree with him profoundly on policy, values, and worldview. I do not want him to shape the country’s future. I would oppose his agenda at nearly every turn.

But there is no reason to believe that JD Vance—whatever his flaws—would knowingly fail to report someone he suspected of sexually abusing a child.

That distinction matters.

This is not about ideology. It is about a minimal moral threshold. The presidency cannot be held by someone under a cloud of credible public belief that he knew about mass child abuse and chose silence.

If that standard collapses, then nothing remains.
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VIII. Conclusion: Silence About Child Abuse Is Disqualifying

This argument does not require certainty. It requires judgment.

When three-quarters of the country believes the president knew something about the sexual abuse of children—and when there is no evidence he ever acted to stop it—the burden shifts. The presidency demands not just innocence, but affirmative moral clarity.

Children do not get second chances. Victims do not get their time back. And a nation cannot afford a leader whose silence speaks louder than his denials.

For that reason alone—however repellent the alternative may be—I believe Congress should act, remove Donald Trump from office, and allow the Vice President to assume the duties of president through January 20, 2029, subject to the will of the voters thereafter.

Because when it comes to protecting children, doing nothing is doing something—and it is unforgivable.


(c) 2025. Becky Romero.
The author grants permission for her op-ed to be republished (only in full) in print or on the internet, with attribution and a link to BeckyRomero.com
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Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
Becky, if you didn't like the outcome of the most recent presidential election, you should have written an op-ed piece advising the Democrats to tone down the wokeness and find better candidates. (maybe you did, and I just missed it)

Bill Maher might give you some valuable pointers.

[media=https://youtu.be/p5ojxMtxjGI]
beckyromero · 36-40, F
@Thinkerbell

Bill Maher says little of value other than to be controversial.

As for the election, I'll be brief since you probably already have read my thoughts on it.

I am absolutely certain that Kamala Harris lost the election because there are too many people in this country who won't vote for a woman and/or won't vote for an African American to be president. She had both things going against her.

But, I am convinced that it was those in the Democratic Party who unwittingly sabotaged her chances with all the talk of a "mini-primary" - a fruition that I believe would have been an electoral disaster for whoever might have ended up the nominee.

There are always those who will say after an election loss that "if" so and so wasn't the nominee that party would have won. If it wasn't Kerry in 2004, if McCain hadn't picked Palin as his running mate, etc.

I have the contrary view: that it was Harris that made it even close.

An alternate scenario where Harris wins?

Here's one.

Pelosi, Obama, et al keep trying to push Biden out of the race by openly questioning his medical condition while increasing their calls for a mini-primary that throws out the results of the primaries that Biden already won.

President Biden is determined to stand by his vice president and not allow these back-stabbers to undermine the chances of defeating Donald Trump. So, in a nationally televised address on July 21, 2024, Biden announced he would end his efforts to be the Democrat nominee for president in 2024. But he also announced he was resigning from the presidency effective at noon the next day. Only his family and a few longtime top aides knew of his decision in advance. The news shocks just about everyone, including the Vice President.

So, instead of a 107 day campaign as the incumbent Vice President trying to win the election in November, voters can see her perform not only as a candidate but as President. That might just have given those doubters about envisioning a woman as the nation's chief executive to see a woman as the nation's chief executive.

Harris would have been free to disagree with some of Biden's policies, expand on others and take credit for their administration's accomplishments. Given that she was essentially a football or baseball stadium's seating capacity of voters of winning the election anyway, 3+ months as president might very well have tipped the scales clearly into her favor.
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@beckyromero

"So, instead of a 107 day campaign as the incumbent Vice President trying to win the election in November, voters can see her perform not only as a candidate but as President."

You conveniently forget to mention that voters had been treated to a 3.5 year display of Harris's incompetence.

e.g.:

[media=https://youtu.be/HBx3wcOdCR4]

"I am absolutely certain that Harris lost the election because there are too many people in this country that won't vote for a woman and/or won't vote for an African American to be president. She had both things going against her."

Hillary won the popular vote, and would have won the electoral vote too, if she or her campaign hadn't taken the Blue Wall for granted.

And regarding Harris, you forgot to mention that there are too many voters who won't vote for a word-salad cackling fool. She had that going against her too.
beckyromero · 36-40, F
@Thinkerbell
You conveniently forget to mention that voters had been treated to a 3.5 year display of Harris's incompetence.

Over 75 million American voters would seem to disagree.

Hillary won the popular vote, and would have won the electoral vote too, if she or her campaign hadn't taken the Blue Wall for granted

I agree with you that Hillary took the Blue Wall for granted. I've said so. And that it was a mistake to try to "pile on" by campaigning in Arizona and sending Obama to Florida the finally weekend instead of spending more resources in WI, MI and PA. Biden didn't take the Blue Wall for granted which is why he won in 2020.

There's a rumor that Bill Clinton was so upset with Hillary's campaign team that in a heated argument with her while he was at the Clinton Presidential Library he threw his phone into the Arkansas River.

And regarding Harris, you forgot to mention that there are too many voters who won't vote for a word-salad cackling fool. She had that going against her too.

You mean as opposed to her opponent who thought the British had an Air Force during our Revolutionary War?
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@beckyromero

"Over 75 million American voters would seem to disagree."

The losing minority vote has always disagreed. By definition. 🙄

"There's a rumor that Bill Clinton was so upset with Hillary's campaign team that in a heated argument with her while he was at the Clinton Presidential Library he threw his phone into the Arkansas River."

I can believe it.

I'm not sure if James Carville threw his phone in a river when Harris lost, but he certainly wasn't happy.

[media=https://youtu.be/kaH8s3zd7CE]

"You mean as opposed to her opponent who thought the British had an Air Force during our Revolutionary War?"

The electorate had every opportunity to observe the candidates' respective gaffes. Kamala's problem was that she couldn't even give sensible answers to questions that she had been fed beforehand by a friendly interviewer.

"I was raised in a middle-class family," followed by what was at best a string of tautologies.
beckyromero · 36-40, F
@Thinkerbell
"I was raised in a middle-class family"

Would you have preferred her to say, "I went to high school in Montreal" ?
Thinkerbell · 41-45, F
@beckyromero

No difference.

One is just as vapid and not-to-the-point as the other. 🙄