The Epstein Chronicles podcast

Robert Maxwell And His Loyalty To None Other Than Himself

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Bob Maxwell’s life reads like a case study in ruthless self-preservation disguised as loyalty to causes, countries, companies, and people. He presented himself as a soldier, patriot, anti-communist, Labour powerbroker, media baron, dealmaker, and global insider, but the through-line was always Maxwell first. He knew how to attach himself to institutions when they served him and discard them when they became inconvenient. Politics was useful when it opened doors. Media ownership was useful when it created power. Friendship was useful when it delivered access. National loyalty was useful when it gave him protection or prestige. Even his public image as a larger-than-life mogul was part of the performance: a man constantly selling the idea that he was indispensable while quietly building a financial empire held together by intimidation, secrecy, debt, and illusion.

The clearest proof of that self-loyalty came in the way Maxwell treated the people closest to his business machine. When the walls began closing in, he did not protect workers, investors, or pensioners; he allegedly raided pension funds and shuffled money through his collapsing empire to keep the illusion alive. That is not loyalty to employees. That is not loyalty to legacy. That is survival by extraction. Maxwell’s entire life seemed to operate on the belief that rules were obstacles, people were instruments, and institutions existed to be bent until they broke. Whatever flags he waved, whatever powerful circles he entered, whatever causes he claimed to serve, the final loyalty was always inward. Bob Maxwell was loyal to Bob Maxwell — and everyone else was just collateral in the maintenance of his myth.


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