Nobody should have expected the Clintons to retire to wherever and enjoy the rest of their years as private citizens. These are people who are driven to positions of power. The loss of the presidency was obviously the most devastating loss the Clintons have ever experienced, having effectively ended their years in public office. Another happy result of that election is that Mr. Soros just threw untold millions of his own money and of the groups he sponsored down the drain of a failed campaign. He couldn’t elect Hillary and he couldn’t even flip the Senate.
These people were defeated, but they have not been banished from public life. Not by a long-shot. Without taking even a week to lick their wounds and re-group, they are back on the attack. One example is the Soros-funded protests against Trump’s victory. But another project they have initiatied is even more ominous.
More on page two.
And we all will fight Hillary and Soros
These magots will burn in hell .
Don’t expect God to just wave a magic wand and make it all better, that’s not the way it works. Your creator gave you the wisdom, strength and willpower to bring forth change. Sitting around waiting for something to happen just because you prayed about it is not good enough.
hang both Soros and Hillary on the same rope at the same time
SOROS NEED TO BE PUT IN A PINE BOX SIX FEET UNDER
UNDER
Ever notice that all U. S. Coins have the word “LIBERTY” on them? & No Ink & Paper used as if it were Money, has word “Liberty” on it! The U. S. Constitution Preamble uses words “…secure the Blessings of LIBERTY to…” The Bill of Rights has words “…life, liberty, or property…” 14th. Amendment has words “…life, liberty, or property..”: 1st. Webster dictionary defines: LIB’ERAL, a. [L. liberalis, from liber, free. See Libe.]
1. Of a free heart; free to give or bestow; not close or contracted; munificent; bountiful; generous; giving largely; as a liberal donor; the liberal founders of a college or hospital. It expresses less than profuse or extravagant.
2. Generous; ample; large; as a liberal donation; a liberal allowance.
3. Not selfish, narrow on contracted; catholic; enlarged; embracing other interests than one’s own; as liberal sentiments or views; a liberal mind; liberal policy.
4. General; extensive; embracing literature and the sciences generally; as a liberal education. This phrase is often but not necessarily synonymous with collegiate; as a collegiate education.
5. Free; open; candid; as a liberal communication of thoughts.
6. Large; profuse; as a liberal discharge of matter by secretions or excretions.
7. Free; not literal or strict; as a liberal construction of law.
8. Not mean; not low in birth or mind.
9. Licentious; free to excess.
Liberal arts, as distinguished from mechanical arts, are such as depend more on the exertion of the mind than on the labor of the hands, and regard amusement, curiosity or intellectual improvement, rather than the necessity of subsistence, or manual skill. Such are grammar, rhetoric, painting, sculpture, architecture, music. &c.
Liberal has of before the thing bestowed, and to before the person or object on which any thing is bestowed; as, to be liberal of praise or censure; liberal to the poor. )( LIB’ERTY, n. [L. libertas, from liber, free.]
1. Freedom from restraint, in a general sense, and applicable to the body, or to the will or mind. The body is at liberty, when not confined; the will or mind is at liberty, when not checked or controlled. A man enjoys liberty, when no physical force operates to restrain his actions or volitions.
2. Natural liberty, consists in the power of acting as one thinks fit, without any restraint or control, except from the laws of nature. It is a state of exemption from the control of others, and from positive laws and the institutions of social life. This liberty is abridged by the establishment of government.
3. Civil liberty, is the liberty of men in a state of society, or natural liberty, so far only abridged and restrained, as is necessary and expedient for the safety and interest of the society, state or nation. A restraint of natural liberty, not necessary or expedient for the public, is tyranny or oppression. civil liberty is an exemption from the arbitrary will of others, which exemption is secured by established laws, which restrain every man from injuring or controlling another. Hence the restraints of law are essential to civil liberty.
The liberty of one depends not so much on the removal of all restraint from him, as on the due restraint upon the liberty of others.
In this sentence, the latter word liberty denotes natural liberty.
4. Political liberty, is sometimes used as synonymous with civil liberty. But it more properly designates the liberty of a nation, the freedom of a nation or state from all unjust abridgment of its rights and independence by another nation. Hence we often speak of the political liberties of Europe, or the nations of Europe.
5. Religious liberty, is the free right of adopting and enjoying opinions on religious subjects, and of worshiping the Supreme Being according to the dictates of conscience, without external control.
6. Liberty, in metaphysics, as opposed to necessity, is the power of an agent to do or forbear any particular action, according to the determination or thought of the mind, by which either is preferred to the other.
Freedom of the will; exemption from compulsion or restraint in willing or volition.
7. Privilege; exemption; immunity enjoyed by prescription or by grant; with a plural. Thus we speak of the liberties of the commercial cities of Europe.
8. Leave; permission granted. The witness obtained liberty to leave the court.
9. A space in which one is permitted to pass without restraint, and beyond which he may not lawfully pass; with a plural; as the liberties of a prison.
10. Freedom of action or speech beyond the ordinary bounds of civility or decorum. Females should repel all improper liberties.
To take the liberty to do or say any thing, to use freedom not specially granted.
To set at liberty, to deliver from confinement; to release from restraint.
To be at liberty, to be free from restraint.
Liberty of the press, is freedom from any restriction on the power to publish books; the free power of publishing what one pleases, subject only to punishment for abusing the privilege, or publishing what is mischievous to the public or injurious to individuals.
This$#%&!@*should be in jail and the$#%&!@*Soros should be hanging in the gallos.
Not going to happen
THE MORE EVIL THEY CAN BE THE MORE THEY DO