Last updated Nov 29, 2025
Prediction
Chamath
Chamath @ 01:14:13Inconclusive
politicsgovernment
During Trump's upcoming term, previously unreleased federal files related to Jeffrey Epstein, associated 'dirty lists,' and remaining classified JFK assassination files will be declassified or otherwise made public.
We're going to see the Epstein files. We're going to see the dirty lists. We're going to see the JFK files.View on YouTube
Explanation

Trump did win the 2024 election and began his second (non‑consecutive) term on January 20, 2025, so the prediction’s time window (his “upcoming term”) runs from January 20, 2025 until January 20, 2029 and is still ongoing as of November 30, 2025. (en.wikipedia.org)

On the JFK files: Trump signed Executive Order 14176 on January 23, 2025 directing declassification of JFK, RFK, and MLK assassination records. A large tranche of JFK records (over 60,000 documents / 77,000+ pages) was released in March 2025, significantly expanding public access to the files. (en.wikipedia.org) However, reporting indicates at least some historically noted material (e.g., a Mexican government report allegedly blaming Cuba) still has not surfaced publicly, so even here it is debatable whether all “JFK files” are truly public. (washingtonpost.com)

On the Epstein files and “dirty lists”: In November 2025 Trump signed the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which requires the DOJ to release all unclassified Epstein‑related DOJ records in a public, searchable format and to give Congress an unredacted list of all government officials and politically exposed persons named in those files. The law sets a 30‑day deadline from signature, implying a target around December 19, 2025 for the public release. (en.wikipedia.org) As of November 30, 2025, news coverage still describes these releases as upcoming or in process, not completed; the full set of DOJ files and any comprehensive official “dirty list” have not yet been made public.

Because:

  • Trump’s term still has more than three years remaining, and
  • the core parts of the prediction about Epstein‑related files and associated lists hinge on actions that are legally mandated but not yet carried out as of the evaluation date,

it is too early to determine whether Chamath’s prediction will ultimately be correct. Some steps (notably on JFK records) have moved in the direction he described, but the key conjunctive claim—that during this term we will “see the Epstein files,” “the dirty lists,” and “the JFK files”—cannot yet be judged fulfilled or disproven. Hence the status is best classified as inconclusive (too early to tell).