In a development that has sent shockwaves through the chattering classes and caused a minor spike in sales of overpriced chardonnay, Bill Gates, the Microsoft co-founder and man whose fortune could buy the moon but chooses to spend it on mosquito nets, has solemnly denied any relationship with the late Jeffrey Epstein. This announcement, delivered with the customary gravitas of a man who has never been told 'no' in his life, comes as UK financial regulators, presumably bored of fining bankers for minor infractions, have decided to scrutinise the elite ties that bind our so-called titans of industry.
Let us pause to appreciate the sheer audacity of a man worth over a hundred billion dollars claiming he had 'no meaningful relationship' with a convicted sex trafficker who flew him on his private jet and visited his island. One does not simply 'bump into' Jeffrey Epstein at a charity gala and accidentally end up on his flight logs. This is the same man who allegedly told a classroom of children that he could watch them through the webcam in their computer, so perhaps his definition of 'meaningful' is different from ours.
But why, you might ask, are the British financial regulators, the very people who should be busy with the important work of ensuring that London's bankers don't steal our pensions, suddenly interested in a tech oligarch from Seattle? Because, dear reader, the tentacles of the Epstein scandal reach far and wide, and the City of London is a swamp of old money, new money, and money so dirty it needs a hazmat suit. The Financial Conduct Authority, a body whose name sounds like it should be played by a stern aunt from a P.G. Wodehouse novel, is now poking into the shadows where the élite conduct their dances.
The whole affair is a bloody theatre of the absurd. We have a man who has dedicated his post-Microsoft life to solving problems like malaria and climate change, yet he apparently missed the memo that associating with a known predator might be a bit of a PR problem. It's like Greta Thunberg being spotted having dinner with an oil baron. And let's not forget the parade of other luminaries who have suddenly discovered they have a 'failure of recall' when it comes to their friendship with Epstein. It's almost as if there's a support group for the wealthy and powerful: 'Hello, my name is Prince Andrew, and I was at a Pizza Express.'
Now, the regulators are asking questions about money, about offshore accounts, about the kind of financial wizardry that turns 'donations' into 'investments' and 'gifts' into 'loans'. They want to see if there was any quid pro quo, any hidden hand guiding the levers of power. But let's be honest: the real question is whether these people are so disconnected from reality that they truly believe their money can buy them immunity from consequences. The answer, as always, is yes.
Gates has his lawyers, his PR machine, his billions. He'll probably emerge from this with a mild scold and a donation to a worthy cause. But the rest of us, we get to watch this grotesque ballet, this pantomime of denial, performed by the very people who tell us we must tighten our belts and pay our taxes. They are the class that lectures us on morality while their own hands are filthy.
As for the regulators, one can only hope they have more teeth than they let on. Though, given their past performance, one suspects they are more like a gummy shark: all show, no bite. The Epstein affair has been a masterclass in how the powerful evade justice, a symphony of forgetting and denial. Gates is just the latest soloist.
So, raise a glass of that overpriced chardonnay to the irony of it all: the man who wanted to put a computer in every home now wants to put a distance between himself and the truth. But the searchlights are on, and the rats are scurrying. Let's see if any of them get caught.












