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It’s an absurdly vast house, among the largest in
Manhattan, but the dining room is windowless, creating
a hermetic or stop-time sense, broken only by the
household staff ferrying in time-of-day-appropriate
foods and beverages.
In sweatshirt, draw-string pants, palm beach
slippers, and half glasses, Jeffrey Epstein sits at the head
of the table. He spends most of his day in the dining
room in front of a laptop and beside a row of reading
glasses (there are a lot of them in case, apparently, he
misplaces a pair, but being quite meticulous he never
does) advising or instructing a startling collection of the
rich and powerful, who are slotted in on an hourly basis.
The apartness of Epstein’s dining room might seem
to offer some buffer for a super rich man who attends to
even more fabulously rich men (and the occasional
extremely rich woman). But with the paparazzi often
posted near by, the outside world seems dangerously
close too. Once I arrived for a visit and found several
police cars blocking the street and thought the worst—
they’d come for Jeffrey. But it was a security detail for a
controversial head of state who was visiting him.
His subject, on this morning in early November
during a set of interviews he’s agreed to have with me
about his life and views, is “hyper wealth.” His subject
is always wealth—how capital should react to the given
global political, economic, and cultural moment. The
baronial quality of the dining room is disturbed only by
an ever-present white board, whereon he scribbles
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