JUNOAK ago

Is it misleading to say that Antinous is a symbol of pederasty and not mention that in the modern era he is a well known gay icon

Also I've never seen any evidence that that one painting of the decapitated kid was actually ever in Comet.

Millennial_Falcon ago

K, thanks for the info.

dogeminho ago

heks_ ago

Good job on this. Just a couple thoughts...

PODESTA EMAILS

I agree with the recommendation of putting Podesta's emails up front. I think it's important for people to understand where this all originated, and that it was from people going through Podesta's emails and noticing a number of comments involving food, particularly pizza, that either seemed like gibberish when read literally, or just seemed to be talking about pizza in a way that humans don't typically talk about it.

So, unlike news reports that claim a bunch of conspiracy theorists just decided out of thin air that when he was talking about pizza it was a code for pedophilia, I think it's important that potential readers understand that the reason people came to believe that 'pizza' and other terms were code for pedophilia involved a two-step process, where 1) the determination that these terms seemed to be code came about because the statements that contained them simply didn't seem to make any sense when those terms were taken literally, and 2) the terms were suspected of specifically relating to pedophilia because those terms are already in use as part of an established slang/code used by pedophiles to refer to sex and to the age group and gender of kids. It can then be pointed out that this interpretation was given more weight by the discovery of the Luzzatto email that talked about sending pre-teen girls to a party at a farm where they would serve as entertainment in the heated pool, and by the further discovery that this woman ran a website where she advertised the opportunity for people to watch her underage granddaughter 'raw and uncut'.

ALEFANTIS INSTAGRAM

When it comes to the pics and comments on Alefantis' Instagram account, I think it's important to characterize them properly. Many people seem to be interpreting them as evidence of wrongdoing, and some even seem to be offering them as that to convince others. In my opinion, this is an incorrect and unhelpful characterization. When presented in that light they can be "debunked" by simply saying, "Naw, that little girl if fine ... I never touched her". In my view, the proper way to characterize them is as evidence of a common theme representative of Alefantis' state of mind. His pictures and comments show a common trend of associating kids and babies with sexualized terms and with money, and with rather oddly allowing and condoning [1] his employees' and friends' practice of associating his supposedly 'family-friendly' business with inappropriate sexual images that draw a correlation between pizza and sex, which is precisely the same connection that seems to exist in Podesta's emails.


[1] Alefantis commented on at least one of the bizzare images his restaurant was tagged in, simply saying 'sex', and the actual business Instagram account 'liked' a picture of the sexual graffiti in the bathroom that included the words, 'shut up and f#ck'.

JUNOAK ago

Many people seem to be interpreting them as evidence of wrongdoing, and some even seem to be offering them as that to convince others.

As a non-pizzagate believer the majority of conversations I have had have been about the instagram photos wrt alefantis. These have been conversations where the person, not me, will bring up the photos. People say that it is the tip of the iceberg but it leads me to asking the question is there any evidence that alefantis is a pedophile (has a sexual attraction to minors), much less acted on it? And there has never been a response.

heks_ ago

Yeah, I get where you're coming from, and in my opinion this is the problem with people either over-stating the case, mischaracterizing the nature of the evidence, or incorrectly representing the goal of this investigation (at least as I've come to understand it as someone who has been observing it with open-minded skepticism about its ultimate claims).

It seems to me that most people seriously investigating this issue will openly admit that there's no smoking gun here that definitively proves Alefantis or anyone else has actually molested (and potentially killed) children. The fact of the matter is that these people aren't completely stupid, so even if they really are guilty of the worst that is suspected it's highly unlikely that they will have left any such smoking guns in places where citizen investigators are likely to be able to come across them.

This is why I think it's important to properly classify and characterize the nature of the evidence. As I think most will admit, the evidence is circumstantial, but there is quite a lot of it. Also, in addition to simply classifying it as circumstantial, I think we can break it down into further categories.

First, there is evidence like the Instagram photos and comments, taste for a particular type of artwork, regular booking of particular bands, etc., that I think is properly characterized as evidence that goes to 'frame of mind' with respect to Alefantis, his friends and employees, and the Podestas. This is not evidence of wrongdoing, but it is suggestive of where their minds are at and where their tastes lie, and for some reason they all seem to have a taste for art (whether photos, paintings, performance art or music) that consistently revolves around the occult, murder and the depiction of children in a sexual context (often in BDSM-type scenarios) or in association with money. And we're not talking about one random outlier piece of art here. We're talking about a consistent theme that stands out on even a cursory examination. That, on its face, without considering anything else, is a cause for concern.

Second, we have evidence that seems to be suggestive of involvement in actual wrongdoing, but which remains circumstantial because, for the most part, it relies on the interpretation of certain statements as using a code. Now, as I kind of addressed in my original comment, suggesting that a code is involved here does not require some kind of crazy conspiracy theory, because the belief that a code is being used is not something pulled out thin air but is derived from the fact that when certain statements are read as though the words in them carry their normal meaning, the sentences simply don't make any sense or, at the very least seem incredibly unnatural. It's also not wildly speculative to interpret the code as relating specifically to pedophilia because the particular terms used in this apparent code are already known to be slang/code words used by pedophiles to refer to sex and to children. And, as I've already said, the apparently uncoded Luzzatto email talking about sending preteen girls as entertainment for the adults in the heated pool seems to further bolster this interpretation (to me, the Luzzatto email seems like a slip-up in sending an uncoded message about this stuff to Podesta's work email). We might also include in this category the seeming references to sex and pedophile logos used by Comet Ping Ping and some of the surrounding establishments.

So what we have here are two lines of different kinds of circumstantial evidence that are both pointing in the same direction of pedophilia with occultic overtones. The first line of evidence involves what appears to be coded (for the most part) references to actual wrongdoing, and the second line of evidence suggests that these people have a particular mindset that would be conducive to them carrying out the very type of wrongdoing that seems to be suggested by the first line of evidence.

And this brings us to the actual purpose of the citizen investigation that had been termed 'pizzagate'. It is not really an attempt to brand certain people as murderous pedophiles and convict them in the court of public opinion, though some individuals have apparently tried to do that. Rather, it is an attempt to gather enough publicly accessible evidence and bring enough attention to this issue to force authorities like the FBI to launch an official and public investigation to find out one way or the other whether these people are guilty of the things that this circumstantial evidence suggests they might be involved in, which, for goodness sake, we all hope they are not. At this point, hoping that the MSM might actually cover the issue honestly seems like a lost cause, but if the pressure is kept up it might just force the authorities to look at this seriously. And if these people are innocent, having a legitimate and transparent investigation that exonerates them would probably be the best thing for them, because without that this scandal will probably hang over their heads for the foreseeable future.

Take care non-believer ;)

JUNOAK ago

The fact of the matter is that these people aren't completely stupid, so even if they really are guilty of the worst that is suspected it's highly unlikely that they will have left any such smoking guns in places where citizen investigators are likely to be able to come across them.

You probably realize this but just to make sure we're clear: because evidence wouldn't be there isn't evidence in itself. I would like to make an analogy here but that will just lead to something about invisible unicorns so I'll spare both of us.

consistently revolves around the occult, murder and the depiction of children in a sexual context (often in BDSM-type scenarios)

I'm wondering what would constitute as "consistent" in this case. I think you would have to look at each individual and ask if this is normal for a person with their profession/interests. For instance did you know Tony Podesta is an art collector hobbyist? What would constitute consistent in that case? If he had 10 paintings that seemed to revolve around children in sexually promiscuous situations but his art collection was in the thousands, is that consistent? Also what was his motivation for buying those paintings, I would think that the artists purpose for creating it would be a big clue. What were they trying to communicate? The person buying the art could have a different perspective from the artist but you would have to make that case separately. I think in one article it said that Tony Podesta put up the sexualized paintings of kids in his bedroom, in that case it wouldn't really matter if he had a consistent behavior of buying this stuff since he has put an importance on these particular ones. But why did he?

when certain statements are read as though the words in them carry their normal meaning, the sentences simply don't make any sense or, at the very least seem incredibly unnatural.

I could come up with many reasons why something might write a sentence that sounds unnatural. Auto correct is a possibility. Being distracted is a possibility. The fact that we do not have context because we only have this one form of communication to view. Possibly they are generally a very busy person and are used to sending out quick short texts or emails which forces an unnatural type of sentence structure.

But you seem sure of one explanation for the unnatural sentences because you go on to say:

It's also not wildly speculative to interpret the code

Is it a code though? How do you know when something is a code? Once you've found out it is a code then you can talk about figuring out what it means. IS it a code for drugs or what? How would you find out? And something I think is important to note is that at some point someone did a search for the term 'pizza' and then picked out all the instances that sounded unusual. People were specifically looking for unusual things in order to figure out if there was a code. The fact that there were unusual sentences can't be pointed to because that is what was specifically being searched for. You just have to ask yourself is there a greater amount of awkwardly phrased sentences here than there would be in any normal persons email. Then remember that there are thousands upon thousands of emails spanning more than a decade.

Luzzatto email

For the Luzzato email could you come up with the most mundane non-pedophilia related explanation for the email? What would it be and how likely would you say that explanation is? If you respond at all this is the thing I would like an answer to the most.

Lastly, I like generally the sentiment in the last paragraph but I'm not sure I like how you say that an investigation "would be good for them". Simply because an accusation exists doesn't put any obligation on the people accused, and I would argue that a 'suggestion' that insinuates a person submit to an investigation or continue to be labelled a child abuser is not actually a suggestion. Anything can be done in the name of 'saving the children'. A serious responsibility lies with people making an accusation, especially one involving heinous crimes of child abuse. But this is the internet and no one will come for the people who make false accusations. There won't be any consequences and then one day people will get bored and move on and there will be people left scarred with the pedophile accusation after a brief period when a mob decided to give themselves license to tear apart and scrutinize everything they've ever done or said.

heks_ ago

Thanks for the thoughtful response.

You probably realize this but just to make sure we're clear: because evidence wouldn't be there isn't evidence in itself. I would like to make an analogy here but that will just lead to something about invisible unicorns so I'll spare both of us.

Assuming I understand you, I think we're on the same page here. It would, of course, be absurd to argue as follows:

A) Even if pizzagate is true, we would not expect a citizen investigation to find a particular type of evidence B) The citizen investigation has not found that particular type of evidence C) Therefore, pizzagate is true.

That would be ridiculous. I'm certainly not advocating anything remotely resembling that. What I'm saying is that the mere failure (so far) of a citizen investigation to find evidence that we would not expect a citizen investigation to be able to find in the first place does not count as evidence that pizzagate is false. Pizzagate may be correct or it may be incorrect, but that needs to be determined (to the extent possible) on the basis of other information that is available to us. The absence of evidence for a theory only counts against the theory when the absent evidence is of a sort that we should positively expect to find were the theory true.

I'm wondering what would constitute as "consistent" in this case. I think you would have to look at each individual and ask if this is normal for a person with their profession/interests. For instance did you know Tony Podesta is an art collector hobbyist? What would constitute consistent in that case? If he had 10 paintings that seemed to revolve around children in sexually promiscuous situations but his art collection was in the thousands, is that consistent? Also what was his motivation for buying those paintings, I would think that the artists purpose for creating it would be a big clue. What were they trying to communicate? The person buying the art could have a different perspective from the artist but you would have to make that case separately. I think in one article it said that Tony Podesta put up the sexualized paintings of kids in his bedroom, in that case it wouldn't really matter if he had a consistent behavior of buying this stuff since he has put an importance on these particular ones. But why did he?

You've kinda got a lot of things packed in here.

First of all, with regards to consistency, I was referring more to the fact that we seem to see a consistent artistic taste that is shared by the people in question, where the themes of the occult, murder and children in sexual/BDSM scenarios seems to turn up as a common interest/taste. I'm not convinced that percentage of total artistic interest is an overly significant factor here (and BTW, yes, I was aware that Tony Podesta is an art collector). The articles I've read have seemed to indicate that we're not talking about single pieces here, and certainly that's true of Alefantis' Instagram account, and his friends/employees' accounts, and the bands he has in, and the art he has put on display, and the art he has been involved in producing. So we're not talking about one-off 'flukes' here (whatever a 'fluke' would be in the context of choosing art). When you collect multiple pieces of art (in whatever medium) that fall under a specific theme, it suggests you have an interest in the theme, and this remains true even if you have 500 other pieces of art on different themes. Being interested in a theme obviously doesn't mean that you have to be single-mindedly interested in the theme. Furthermore, the themes in question are themselves somewhat unusual with respect to general artistic interests in the population. Obviously, an interest in these artistic themes is not automatically some kind of signifier of that someone is guilty of anything, but it is unusual enough to be noteworthy, and especially so when these outlying artistic tastes just happen to be found in a group of closely connected people who are suspected of doing the very things that their artistic tastes depict.

Does this prove these people are guilty of something? No. Is it a smoking gun? No. Is it a noteworthy fact that should be included in weighing the plausibility of the pizzagate suspicions? Yes.

I think it really comes down to this question: Given the interest these people have demonstrated in art depicting or referencing the occult, murder and children in sexual/BDSM scenarios, do the pizzagate suspicions seem more plausible than they would have seemed if these people had not demonstrated any interest in such art?

People will have to decide that for themselves, but I think many people here have come down on the side of answering 'yes' to that question.

I could come up with many reasons why something might write a sentence that sounds unnatural. Auto correct is a possibility. Being distracted is a possibility. The fact that we do not have context because we only have this one form of communication to view. Possibly they are generally a very busy person and are used to sending out quick short texts or emails which forces an unnatural type of sentence structure.

The question, though, is whether or not those types of explanations seem as plausible as the 'code words' explanation given the specific cases in question. We're not just talking about typos here, or strange/troubling words inserted auto-correct-style into normal and innocuous statements. If we're seeing auto-correct-style word replacements it's putting innocuous words into strange/troubling statements ("get a pizza for an hour"). In other cases, it's that the statement just seems incoherent when the words in them are taken literally ("Do you think I’ll do better playing dominos on cheese than on pasta?"). These statements, and others like them, are rather strange. They range from unnatural to essentially incoherent. In some cases, like "get a pizza for an hour", a fairly obvious context suggests itself apart from any knowledge of a preexisting code, namely, "get a girl for an hour". This may or may not be the correct interpretation. The thing is, it just so happens to assign to the word "pizza" precisely the meaning that it has in the already established pedo-code, where "pizza" means "girl". We can then try to translate the other more generally incoherent statement by supplying other connected code words in place of the suspect terms: "Do you think I'll do better playing domination/BDSM on a young girl than on a young boy"

Now, once again, I don't know that this interpretation is correct. I only know that it seems like the statements are using code words, that if a code is being used here, one of these statements suggests a specific meaning for the code word 'pizza' apart from any knowledge of a preexisting code, that this suggested meaning does correspond to an existing pedophile code, and that using that pedo-code to translate another strange food-related statement results in a meaning that seems more coherent than the original statement itself.

At this point we can reasonably ask ourselves about the inherent plausibility of this interpretation. For example, we can ask ourselves whether it seems plausible that pedophiles would communicate in code. And, of course, we already know that they do. We can also ourselves whether it seems plausible that they would communicate in a code that consists of food-related terms, like "pizza", "pasta", "cheese", etc. And, of course, we know that they would not only communicate in a code that uses words like that, but that they communicate in a code that actually uses those specific terms. We can also ask whether it's plausible that political elites and their close associates would be involved in pedophilia. And, of course, we have ample evidence from recent history around the world that shows it's not only plausible but common. So the pedophile-code interpretation of these emails is not, in itself, inherently implausible. That doesn't mean it's necessarily true, but it means that it is not obviously silly, and cannot simply be waved off due to some obvious inherent implausibility.

We can then also ask whether the interpretation seems plausible given the specific people involved. This is always going to be sketchy, because even people who seem squeaky-clean and like they would never be involved in child abuse do sometimes turn out to be pedophiles. So the question is really whether or not we have information that stands out to us as making this theory/interpretation more plausible than it would be in the absence of that information, and this is where we might take note of the artistic predilections of these people, which appears to show an interest in the depictions of child abuse and connected subject matter, whether sly or bold. We might also consider the Luzzatto email that speaks of sending pre-teen girls to a party at a farm to serve as entertainment for the adults in a heated pool while making a point of listing their very young ages.

(continued in reply to this comment)

heks_ ago

(continued from parent comment)

Once again, I'm not saying this is determinative. What I'm saying is that the interpretation that we're seeing use of a pedophile code in John Podesta's emails, whether true or false, is not obviously absurd or inherently implausible, nor is it baseless or pulled out of thin air. It might be wrong, but it's not obviously silly or frivolous. Furthermore, I'm saying that when you have a group of people who you think might be involved in pedophilia and you're weighing the plausibility of that suspicion, most people are going to find it more plausible than they otherwise would have when they find out that these people 1) seem to have a taste for art depicting pedophilic scenarios, and 2) have received an email that, on its face, reads like an almost explicit description of setting the stage for child sex abuse at a secluded party. None of this is a smoking gun, but taken together it is suggestive and troubling.

But you seem sure of one explanation for the unnatural sentences because you go on to say:

It's also not wildly speculative to interpret the code

Not at all. I'm not saying I'm sure of anything. If you look at the context of the statement you quoted I think you'll realize that I'm making a conditional statement predicated on accepting the prior conditional statement.

In other words, I was saying that 1) It may or may not be a code, but interpreting it as a code is not just a completely baseless conspiracy theory pulled out of thin air, and 2) If it is a code, it's not wildly speculative to interpret it as being about pedophilia

The fact that there were unusual sentences can't be pointed to because that is what was specifically being searched for.

If you're search for unusual sentences, that means you need to be especially aware of confirmation bias. It does not mean you can't point to the fact that certain statements really do seem to be unusual in a way that suggests they might be employing a code.

Now, if it is a code, could it be a code for drugs? Perhaps. I think you'd have to weigh the plausibility of that interpretation vs. the pedophilia interpretation given whatever other information has been discovered. I'd be quite happy if it was drugs rather than pedophilia. I'd be quite happy if it was nothing at all. I have no political axe to grind here. I'm apolitical. I care about what's true and I care about people's positions on issues being accurately represented, whether I agree with them or not. In fact, it would probably be fair to say that my main interest in pizzagate lies in the way that the MSM and other critics have unfairly misrepresented the nature of the core citizen investigation going on here, as well as how they have simply dismissed this whole affair as being definitively 'debunked' without ever accurately conveying the nature of the arguments, the reasons being cited for the suspicions, or the historical precedent for this kind of thing, much less offering any powerful argument for why such an investigation should be summarily dismissed.

For the Luzzato email could you come up with the most mundane non-pedophilia related explanation for the email? What would it be and how likely would you say that explanation is? If you respond at all this is the thing I would like an answer to the most.

Look, it's simple to come up with a non-pedophile explanation for the email when you're specifically trying to come up with a non-pedophile explanation. You could just decide that it means she's sending some kids to a totally normal party and they're going to go swimming. The problem is that this kind of interpretation results from saying, "If we take pedophilia off the table, what is the next most plausible interpretation of the email?" There is very little limit on our ability to offer plausible-sounding alternative explanations for something when the most straight-forward explanation is placed out-of-bounds. The real question is how a reasonably intelligent person reading this email would most naturally interpret it even if they weren't aware of the suspicions currently surrounding the Podestas. As a reasonably intelligent person myself, I can tell you that if I just stumbled across this email I would be asking what the hell I was reading, because on its face it sounds like a woman sending some pre-teen girls to a secluded adult party for sex. And if I happened to find out that this woman had a website where she advertised watching 'raw and uncut' video of these young girls it would only bolster that initial interpretation. Now, does this mean that the initial interpretation is correct? No. But it is a prima facie plausible interpretation. And at some point we have to take note of how often we find ourselves saying, "Is it clear proof? No, but..."

Lastly, I like generally the sentiment in the last paragraph but I'm not sure I like how you say that an investigation "would be good for them". Simply because an accusation exists doesn't put any obligation on the people accused, and I would argue that a 'suggestion' that insinuates a person submit to an investigation or continue to be labelled a child abuser is not actually a suggestion. Anything can be done in the name of 'saving the children'.

I completely agree. The reason I said what I did was because I was (implicitly) referring to the fact that we live in a culture now where the mere insinuation of either rape or child abuse is enough to tarnish a person for life. I am not for that at all. I strongly believe that people should be considered innocent until proven guilty. People do make false accusations. And sometimes the stars of circumstantial evidence really do align against innocent people. I am perfectly open to the possibility that that is happening here. I'm also perfectly open the possibility the pizzagate is absolutely right. I think there's an unusual amount of coincidences and circumstantial evidence here suggesting that these people have some involvement in occultic pedophilia. I just as strongly maintain the view that they are absolutely innocent of these accusations until they are proven guilty of them beyond a reasonable doubt. If I bumped into Alefantis or Podesta tomorrow, I would not think to myself, "I'm talking to a pedophile". Instead, I would think to myself, "I'm talking to someone who is suspected of being a pedophile", but those two propositions are universes apart for me and I would have no problem treating them or thinking of them as innocent until proven guilty, even though I'm in favor of an investigation being launched into these suspicions because I think there's enough circumstantial evidence to warrant one. In an ideal world, investigations like pizzagate, whether citizen-based or official, could be conducted and everybody could remain impartial and the people under suspicion could not have their character tarnished at all until and unless they were proven to have actually done something wrong [1]. Unfortunately, that's not the world we live in, so we have to weigh the severity of the potential crimes suspected of being committed against the risk of damaging someone's reputation, and when the lives of children hang in the balance, the former is generally going to outweigh the latter. Unfortunately for Podesta and Alefantis, I don't think the media coverage has truly done them any service. Nor did Podesta help himself by disappearing for a month or more and never bothering to even deny the charges. Nor did Alefantis help himself by trying to debunk the charges by appealing to a misleading half-truth (i.e. 'It can't be true because Comet Ping Pong doesn't even have a basement' [oh, but the other restaurant I own right next door does])

So coming back to the point, the reason I said an investigation might be the best thing for them now if they are innocent is not because I think they have a requirement to submit themselves to an investigation in order to be presumed innocent, but because the way things have unfolded, the suspicion surrounding them has only grown and doesn't show signs of going away. So, whether right or wrong, if they're innocent, an official transparent investigation that exonerates them might be the only way to get them out from under the shadow of this thing. Unfortunately, even that is questionable, because the media has so discredited itself over the past year and on this issue in particular that they can't be trusted to report on it honestly, and the authorities have a long history of covering this kind of thing up when it implicates the elites and their friends.

I may or may not engage on this subject further. I seem to spending more time on it lately than I can spare and I'm not sure that anyone is really finding my contributions here useful since I'm not actively engaged in any investigation.


[1] Obviously in an ideal world this kind of thing wouldn't happen at all, but I'm sure you know what I mean.

projection ago

Excellent. Thank you.

monhunX ago

You should include a section on people investigating child trafficking who have been killed: Monica Peterson, Nancy Schaeffer

Anyone else you can think of? Three people were killed recently in Finland under very strange circumstances.

monhunX ago

Very well written summary. thank you for taking the time to do this

PoeticallyIncorrect ago

Really great summary, I wish I could give you more upvotes. Can we help turn this into a picture-book version with the photos on the side of the summary? I think it would make it easier to share.

Millennial_Falcon ago

Can we help turn this into a picture-book version with the photos on the side of the summary?

Good idea. Making an infographic out of it would be awesome.

JSchoolDropout ago

Very concise overview and well-sourced. Good job.

Millennial_Falcon ago

  • Exhibit C: Alefantis' Connections to the Podestas and Clintons

James Alefantis himself was deemed one of the 50 most powerful people of Washington D.C by GQ magazine.
He was the romantic partnerof David Brock. David Brock is the Chief of Media Matters, a major instrument of the Democratic Party. Brock is also the founder of Correct the Record, a Super PAC that supported the Clinton campaign.

James Alefantis is seen with Tony Podesta here andhere. An email from Alefantis to Tony Podesta, which Tony Podesta forwarded to John Podesta had an attached file which was an image of Hillary’s Logo with a pizza slice in it, above a Comet logo. Alefantis also made desserts for a Clinton campaign event (Notice another photo with Alefantis and Tony Podesta together, and that Alefantis visited the White House on at least five occasions.) Clinton personally thanked Alefantis for cooking for one of her fundraisers.

Comet also received donations of over $20k from American Bridge 21st Century PAC, a primary funder of which is billionaire Clinton-backer George Soros. Donations can be seen here, here, and here.

All this, yet Alefantis claims he has NEVER MET Hillary Clinton. Was he ordered to distance himself from Clinton after this scandal went viral?

  • Exhibit D: Additional Evidence Implicating the Clintons Specifically

NOTE: All previously cited evidence implicates the Clintons, as John Podesta has been their right-hand man, and as James Alefantis is closely associated with the Clinton Campaign and major Democratic Party leaders.

Bill Clinton is known to have flown multiple times on the "Lolita Express" of disgraced billionaire pedophile Jeffery Epstein to visit Epstein's private "pedophile island," Little St. James. Hillary Clinton also joined him on occasion. Bill Clinton even ditched the Secret Service to make these trips Interestingly, Jeffrey Epstein claimed to be a co-founder of the Clinton Foundation.

A woman named Laura Silsby was caught trafficking children in Haiti, and Hillary was sent emails regarding her updates. Laura Silsby was let off the hook by a Clinton-appointed convicted sex trafficker.

Frank Giustra owner of the Radcliffe Foundation is on the board of directors for the Clinton Foundation, and is a major Clinton Foundation donor. The logo of Elpida Home, a refugee center founded by the Radcliffe Foundation, happens to be almost identical to the pedophile boylover symbol.

Now we must reveal a spark, before Podesta's strange emails, that fueled this investigation.

A purported FBI leaker posted claims on 4chan's "/pol/," an anonymous poltical forum. Admittedly, the forum he chose is not exactly reputable. However, this fits with his claim that he wanted to surround himself with noise in order to prevent his FBI superiors from detecting him, and it fits because he knew many in that anti-Clinton audience would take him seriously and investigate, employing what the forum's users call "weaponized autism." The alleged leaker's central claim was that the NYPD and FBI had discovered immensely scandalous information about Hillary Clinton through Anthony Weiner's laptop, but the FBI is not yet acting on the information for reasons we will not discuss here. For our purposes, the relevant allegation is this: The purported leaker alleged that the Clinton Foundation is a front for human trafficking, including child sex trafficking. He told us, "Dig deep and you will find it. It's sickening." Well, we've been digging, and we seem to be finding it.

Summaries of the leaker's claims can be found here: Part 1; Part 2; Part 3.

  • Exhibit E: Further Supporting Evidence and Historical Precedents

There was a 1994 Discovery Channel Documentary that covered pedophilia rampant in our government, but it was banned and never aired.

Washington Post reported that sex slavery is a big problem in D.C.

A leaked government email in which pizza is obviously a code word: "Who all is in the Austin office today who is going to want pizza? We only have one slice and we need to know how thinly to slice it."

The largest pedophile ring ever discovered was exposed by the FBI coincidentally after Anthony Weiner's laptop was taken.

Another pedophile ring exposed in Norway.

The Belgium pedophile/sex scandal. and the older Savile pedophilia scandal in the UK..

  • Exhibit F: Media Coverup Efforts

The same establishment elites who try to control politics also control the mainstream media (this includes Fox News). They do not want corruption of this magnitude to be exposed. As soon as word of Pizzagate went viral, the mainstream media began a coverup campaign. They began denouncing the allegations as "false," "hoax," and "fake news," without directly addressing the evidence.

Prima facie, the media have no basis for labeling an ongoing investigation, which is entirely rooted in real evidence, as "fake news." In fact, Pizzagate is not an allegation of a specific, individual crime (e.g. the abuse of a specific child on a specific day and time). Rather, it is an investigation into the possibility of certain individuals being involved in certain kinds of criminal activity. Therefore, labeling Pizzagate "false/hoax/fake" is patently absurd and dishonest, especially considering the media's refusal to address the evidence directly.

Reddit CEO Steve Huffman banned the Pizzagate research community from Reddit on bogus grounds, accusing us of engaging in a "witch hunt," even though we only used publicly-available information, and never called for vigilantism or harrassment of any kind. While we understand Reddit may have had legitimate concerns of legal action, there is plenty of reason and evidence to believe the decision was politically motivated.

Bot accounts denying Pizzagate have been discovered on Twitter. Twitter has also been suspending users who discuss Pizzagate, and Facebook has plans to censor what it deems "fake news."

FR33D0M ago

Nice work! Exhibit E strikes me as not evidence directly relevant the Pizzagate / Podesta email case. Rather, it shows that there is precedent and this case is not far fetched. I'd suggest making it either a "Background" section at the beginning of the document, or an "Appendix" at the end where it can detail the many cases that prove these ideas are not farfetched. Here are some additional examples from another writeup.

There is proof that protected political pedophilia has been happening for a long time, all over the world. Notable scandals include; Catholic Church's protection of child sex predators, The Franklin Scandal, The Finders Scandal, The Dutroux Affair, The UK's Inquiry Into Institutionalized Child Sexual Abuse under repeated scandal, The Jimmy Savile Scandal, The Norway Pedophile Politicians Scandal, The Jeffrey Epstein Scandal, the inexplicable political support of Frederic Mitterand, The Pace Memoradum, the discoveries of the Royal Commission into Child Sex Abuse, the 5200 uninvestigated names in the Pentagon child porn trading, etc. The list of known cover ups defies reason.

Millennial_Falcon ago

I'd suggest making it either a "Background" section at the beginning of the document, or an "Appendix" at the end where it can detail the many cases that prove these ideas are not farfetched.

I agree, thanks.

MenaAirport ago

Thank you great job MF. You have my vote.

popezandy ago

Actually, if I wrote an edit and sent it to you would you take a look at it? I just have a few suggestions. Glad you included weaponised autism haha. Great piece.

Millennial_Falcon ago

Actually, if I wrote an edit and sent it to you would you take a look at it?

Sure, suggestions are welcome. Like I said, this is a work in progress.

popezandy ago

Cool. Thanks for compilation Millennium.

popezandy ago

I think exhibit a should be the podesta emails, then b should be comet. Chronological organization and all. Still, great post, my vote for sticky.

Millennial_Falcon ago

I chose to lead with Comet because that's the strongest evidence we have so far. Without that evidence as context, the emails seem weak as evidence, so leading with the emails could turn away readers who aren't familiar with the Comet evidence.