The recent publication of Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl has once again dragged into the light the crimes of the ruling class, and the failure of any institution to provide justice under this rotten system.
Giuffre has consistently been one of the most outspoken victims of billionaire paedophile Jeffrey Epstein and his wealthy accomplices, in particular Prince Andrew.
Monarchy protects its “favourite son”
For years, the palace has tried to bury the scandal surrounding the Queen’s “favourite son.”
Reports suggest that a staggering £12 million was quietly paid to settle the US court case, money which ultimately came from the public purse. Giuffre said her silence was bought for a year until the Platinum Jubilee was safely out of the way, so as not to ruin the day for Andrew’s mother.
In the memoir, we learn that the royal family even went so far as to pay online trolls to harass Giuffre. Clearly they weren’t content with simply buying her silence.
Giuffre also explains that in 2019, an interview which had already been filmed was pulled at the last minute by ABC News after they were “threatened a million different ways” by the British monarchy to suppress the story.
The lengths the royal family was willing to go to in order to suppress the story reveal the true nature of the monarchy. Far from being just a tourist attraction or harmless tradition, the monarchy is a powerful pillar of the state.
This is far from the first time that the monarchy has flouted the law. The ‘Firm’ has a dark and sordid history. In the 1970s for example, Prince Andrew’s great uncle, Lord Mountbatten, was embroiled in a child sex trafficking ring in the North of Ireland, which was subsequently covered up by the police and intelligence services.
Monarchs themselves are above the law in a very literal sense – not only from being prosecuted themselves, but even being exempt from giving evidence in court.
The fact that even through bribery and blackmail the palace failed to bury Andrew’s disgrace only has intensified their crisis.
The palace has been forced to strip Andrew of his titles to save face, with Prince William warning that he presented a danger, and it is clear that the danger is to nothing less than the monarchy itself. Every attempt to contain the scandal has further revealed the royals as anything but neutral arbiters.
The walk abouts will be tricky from now on, King Charles gets heckled on today’s engagement💁🏾♀️
“How long have you known about Andrew & Epstein”?
Sounds like a valid question to me 💁🏾♀️ pic.twitter.com/Onfw4Q9VKT
— SK 💃🏾🕺 (@Rimmesfk) October 27, 2025
Entire establishment complicit
Prince Andrew is far from alone in these acts. Giuffre’s book also hints at a “well-known prime minister” who she says is too powerful to name, exposing a web of exploitation that runs through every pillar of the establishment, from Hollywood to parliaments to Buckingham Palace.

Arch-Blairaite ‘Lord’ Peter Mandalson, now former US ambassador, backed Epstein even after he was convicted, which has caused great embarrassment to Keir Starmer.
President Donald Trump, the most powerful man in the world, has also grown uneasy over the question of the Epstein files, an issue his MAGA base has refused to let go of.
During his election campaign, he boasted that if elected, he would release the files, which helped bolster his image as anti-establishment. Now that he is back in the White House, he has backtracked completely, dismissing Epstein as “somebody that nobody cares about.”
The reaction from his own supporters shows the opposite: people do care, and they are beginning to see Trump’s own open complicity in these crimes, even going as far as to send Ghislaine Maxwell a Birthday card while she was awaiting trial.
Andrew therefore does not represent an individual intent on abuse, but rather a class in a period of moral decay.
The media headlines are constantly dominated by stories of Pakistani men or refugees involved in grooming gangs, with the establishment using these crimes to whip up a culture war. These cases were connected to particular communities in an attempt to suggest that abuse was somehow rooted within them.
Yet this whole scandal exposes the entire ruling establishment. As Giuffre herself stated Andrew acted as if he “believed having sex with me was his birthright”.
Britain’s biggest grooming gang is not to be found within a particular ethnicity, but rather at the top, with a class that believes women are to be had as their property.
No justice under capitalism
Throughout the book, Giuffre reflects on how no justice has ever come for the torture she endured, and it is not hard to see why.
The Metropolitan Police went as far as interviewing her, yet still refused to investigate Andrew, unwilling to risk challenging the monarchy.

In the United States, the case was quietly settled with money, and the only person to face a prison sentence was Ghislaine Maxwell. Epstein conveniently committed suicide in custody, leaving the rest of his powerful associates untouched.
Yet no matter how hard the ruling class tries to bury the truth, the more it reveals their own depravity. More and more people can see that something is deeply rotten, and the more the ruling class attempts to hide it, the clearer this becomes.
Giuffre’s memoir exposes that the monarchy is not as a neutral institution, but a cold hard calculating family intent on maintaining itself as a decrepit pillar of the British establishment. They share all the vices of a degenerate class, and feel free to act with impunity.
Giuffre herself died earlier this year by suicide, and even since her death we have gotten no closer to justice. Prince Andrew remains free, as do countless others of the establishment.
For those naturally reviled by the corrupt establishment, in which everyone from Starmer, Trump to King Charles are implicated, the only rational conclusion must be that justice will not be bought by the very same establishment committing these crimes.
For these monsters to be brought to justice, the pitchforks must come out for them, their privileges and the entire system they stand on.
