It will be interesting to learn who this "sponsor" is that Asange is alleging she secretly funded and, in turn, funded the Clinton Foundation (and ISIS).
The severity, imo, will be how it was funded (define secret) and whether they're a known supporter of terrorism (or it's a more haphazard thing), and how exactly it's been determined money directly funneled back to the CF. If any of it is true at all.
I don't think our rhetoric frames the issues right. "Terrorism" is one of those terms that just doesn't mean anything. Iran can be termed the leading "State Sponsor of Terrorism" with about the same meaning as others can label the United States the leading "State Sponsor of Terrorism". The militarists among us can gloat about our "Shock and Awe" exploits with the same meaning as Islamists can gloat about hijacked planes cruising into nationally symbolic towers.
But who frames this rhetoric that drives the two sides? Lord Cecil Rhodes, the one-time colonist Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) was named for, saw pretty clearly that England was too small, had too few people to staff a great military or even a sufficient Navy, to long hold sway over India, Africa, and Asia. Even with Canada and Australia whose natives posed little threat, and even with the United States culturally and financially drawn into sync with the Empire. It has always been necessary to create divisions in the populace around the world, and necessary to employ rhetoric to that end. This hard fact is the mainspring of the modern progressive political movement, inclusive of the League of Nations and United Nations, all tools for mass management of the world in the hands of elitists. No elected representative government, yo.
The United States would be alright, if we had ever taken control of the rhetoric.
Nationalism is a dirty word because it unifies people. Populism is a dirty word because it empowers the ordinary folks. Racism is a dirty word because race is normally a unifying notion of identity, wherein people with obvious similar characteristics can easily create a community. It has always been harder to deny the classifications their place in human dynamics than create higher ideals that are more abstract, and promote them in the public consciousness with sufficient credibility to the masses.
The whole point of rhetoric is to create disturbed mass logic and prevent natural simplistic behavior. Literally speaking, rhetoric is always some form of inciting riot. Or compliance. It's making words function as tools for control and management, as well as the motive for the League of Nations and the United Nations, all institutions of elitist control of the world.
Trump is a tool, too. I found that he met with the head of the Council of Foreign Relations before he announced his campaign, and came out talking about what great people the CFR are, and how much he likes the head of the CFR. And then the CFR declares "War on Trump". That's how clever Management is, always deceiving the masses somehow, and manipulating the little people.
Hillary is a known CFR stooge herself, but so is Trump. This election is a classic management psy-op. It doesn't make any difference who "wins", Management has it all under control. Trump is being used to prevent an actual decent and independent challenge to Management.
I see most of you little JFC folks buying the rhetoric of Management. We gotta stop letting Management divide us. Don't buy the rhetoric. We are not Black or White, we are "People". We are not really impacted in our daily lives one another as much as we are impacted by "Management".
When you go to the colleges, ya gotta realize that the profs are teaching you the rhetoric of Management, and training you to your little task as a cog in the kind of society Management thrives on.
Tribalism and racism have never been so much the barrier to human liberty as elitism. If the rhetoric could be taken over and converted to a discussion of universal human rights, the issues of racism, tribalism, and privileged management would just not be real. It is to deny human liberty that Management pushes the rhetoric of race, nationalism, and other balkanizing notions.