Inside 'Dialog': Leaked Data Exposes How Peter Thiel’s Secret Club Segregates and Exploits the Global Elite
The hidden world of the ruling class reveals a hyper-capitalist playground where billionaires, politicians, and celebrities are ranked like commodities.

A massive data breach has pulled back the curtain on Dialog, a hyper-exclusive social club co-founded in 2006 by right-wing billionaire Peter Thiel and angel investor Auren Hoffman. Leaked by Swiss hacktivist maia arson crimew—renowned for previously exposing the U.S. Department of Justice's discriminatory no-fly list—the cache of documents exposes a dystopian playground of the global ruling class. The leak reveals how the economic elite commodify human connections, enforce rigid class hierarchies, and plan global strategies far from public accountability.
Every year, Dialog gathers approximately 200 members of the global oligarchy, including politicians, tech CEOs, foreign dignitaries, academics, and Hollywood elites. This August, they are scheduled to meet for a two-day retreat in a private compound outside Dublin, Ireland. While the existence of this retreat has long been known, the leak exposes the disturbing reality of how these elites view humanity, establishing a rigid caste system that reflects the worst impulses of modern capitalism.
At the core of Dialog’s operations is a hidden, highly stratified grading system that ranks attendees on an alphabetical scale of A, B, and C based on their accumulated wealth and public fame. In a stark demonstration of capital-worship, the "C" grade represents the highest possible tier of VIP status. This grading process reduces human beings to mere financial assets and PR commodities, ensuring that those with the most capital wield the greatest influence within the group.
To see how this works in practice, one need look no further than the club's treatment of actor Josh Brolin. Evaluated as a top-tier "C" VIP, Brolin’s profile in the leaked database features notes highlighting his commercial utility. The organizers explicitly cite his role as Thanos in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, highlighting his involvement in "Avengers: Endgame," which grossed over $2.79 billion. Under this capitalist logic, a human being's worth and social tier are directly tied to the multi-billion-dollar corporate franchises they generate.
Furthermore, Dialog staff rate participants on a numerical "value-add" scale from 1 to 4. Those deemed to have a "Value Add Too Low" or labeled a "Poor Culture Fit" are systematically disinvited from subsequent events. This algorithmic vetting process mirrors the corporate workplace, where individuals are constantly measured for efficiency and discarded when they no longer serve the interests of the powerful. It is an extension of corporate surveillance into the realm of private social interaction.


