It feels as if in the literal world of the Clintons, there is room for neither art nor film nor literature.

I’m sure this isn’t true; yet in their stead, presented to our public eyes as what we should emulate, the Clintons provide star-studded galas. These events take place in resort locations or world capitals and advertise the Clinton Global Initiative. For young people, huge annual events at large universities are conducted by CGI University. One former moderator described CGI events as “creepy, disgusting and gross.” A reader private-messaged me to say they had tried to attend a publically-advertised CGI meeting in Florida, and was told upon arrival that it would cost $20,000 to get in.

We have now seen three downloads of emails provided to Wikileaks from Clinton campaign chair John Podesta’s computer. At the total of more than 5,000 (as of 11 October 2016), even the first group confirms that everything I analyzed about the Clinton Foundation and its various initiatives is true. And then some.

Based on the Clinton Foundation’s public information, I questioned the charitable nature of the Clinton Global Initiative itself. Via Wikileaks, we can now see that how much companies or organizations paid to participate (over $1 million, in some cases), and also what they said they got out of it.

There are emails in the Wikileaks archive that refer to the intent for the CGI to “sunset” after 10 years.

With ever increasing revenue and TV coverage, why would it?

I believe a case could be made to have the Clinton Global Initiative become a tax-exempt (not charitable) organization such as a business league, chamber of commerce or trade organization. This means that CGI would not have to pay Federal income tax. It also would mean that the companies or individuals paying to attend these gala meetings would not be able to deduct the fees or sponsorships as “charitable donations” — which is like whoop-de-doo. They would write it off anyway as promotional or advertising expenses — exactly what they are.

It’s the sad slap in the face to actual charitable organizations that the CGI represents, plus the sickening, soul-killing clampdown of “We only invite the best companies that can afford it; plus the most click-baity of TV personalities to moderate how we tell others we will improve the world …”

They think they are better than the rest of us. They think that these very expensive time-wasting three day events make any material difference to anything.