Tuesday, July 26, 2016

The Democrat Party Falls Totally Apart

C O L L U I O N
col·lu·sion
/kəˈlo͞oZHən/
noun
noun: collusion
  1. secret or illegal cooperation or conspiracy, especially in order to cheat or deceive Sanders and voters.

    "the DNCC chairwoman has been exposed in emails working in collusion with Hillary Clinton"

    synonyms:conspiracy, connivance, complicity, intrigue, plotting, secret understanding, collaboration, scheming

    "there had been collusion between the DNCC Chairperson and certain media groups"
    • Law
      illegal cooperation and conspiracy between Hillary Clinton and DNCC Staff.




      CORRUPTION AT IT'S FINEST 
      CRIMINALS COME TOGETHER
      T H E  G R E A T  D I V I D E R S
      T H E  G R E A T E S T  L I A R S
      D E M O C R A T E S   S H A L L  R E M A I N  D I V I D E D
       C L I N T O N /S A N D E R S   L O S E   V O T E S   T O  T R U M P 



      • DNCC CHAIR DEBBIE WASSERMAN SCHULTZ FIRED AS RACIST AND LEWD EMAILS ARE EXPOSED
      •  CLINTON AND SCHULTZ RIGGED DNCC VOTES AGAINST SANDERS
      • SANDERS SUPPORTERS WILL NOT SUPPORT CLINTON
      • CLINTON & DNCC EMAILS DEFAME WOMAN, BLACKS, LATINOS, MORE


      • WATCH CHANGE THAT MATTERS AND DNCC CONVENTION FAIL
      • SANDER'S SUPPORTERS PROTESTING AGAINST CRIMINAL CLINTON


      HILLARY CLINTON  

      CRIMINAL - CORRUPTION - COLLUSION

      cor·rupt
      kəˈrəpt/
      adjective
      adjective: corrupt
      1. 1.
        having or showing a willingness to act dishonestly in return for money or personal gain.


        "unscrupulous logging companies assisted by corrupt officials"

        synonyms:dishonest, unscrupulous, dishonorable, unprincipled, unethical, amoral, untrustworthy, venal, underhanded, double-dealing, fraudulent, bribable, criminal, illegal, unlawful, nefarious; More
        informalcrooked, shady, dirty, sleazy


        "a corrupt official"  ie: Hillary Clinton
        antonyms:honest, law-abiding
      2. 2.
        (of a text or a computer database or program) made unreliable by errors or alterations.
      verb
      verb: corrupt; 3rd person present: corrupts; past tense: corrupted; past participle: corrupted; gerund or present participle: corrupting



    • 1.
      cause to act dishonestly in return for money or personal gain.


      "there is a continuing fear of firms corrupting politicians in the search for contracts"
      • cause to become morally depraved.


        "she has corrupted the boy"

        synonyms:deprave, pervert, debauch, degrade, warp, lead astray, defile, pollute, sully

        "a book that might corrupt its readers"
      • archaic
        infect; contaminate.


        "the corrupting smell of death"

    • 2.
      change or debase by making errors or unintentional alterations.


      "Epicurus's teachings have since been much corrupted"
      synonyms:alter, tamper with, interfere with, bastardize, debase, adulterate


      "the apostolic writings had been corrupted"