Is Hillary Clinton an alcoholic? No...
Are you a loser sockpuppet? Yes...
Is Hillary Clinton an Alcoholic?
Matamoros
2013/01/05 11:03:44
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524 votes
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46 votes
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Hillary Is A Stumbling Drunk
All of Washington knows she is a drunk, but they cover it up with a blood clot story!
First, she breaks her arm walking on a flat surface, then she falls and gets a concussion.
Not only is she seen swilling everything from beer and wine to hard liquor all over the world, but she was filmed drunk - staggering carefully up the stairs on the State Department's plane in Yemen and falling flat on her face at the top of the stairs.
VIDEO OF DRUNK HILLARY FALLING
Where there's smoke, there's fire.
Obama famously called her a drunk very publicly.
Obama: "Hillary won't stop drunk texting me!"


All of Washington knows she is a drunk, but they cover it up with a blood clot story!
First, she breaks her arm walking on a flat surface, then she falls and gets a concussion.
Not only is she seen swilling everything from beer and wine to hard liquor all over the world, but she was filmed drunk - staggering carefully up the stairs on the State Department's plane in Yemen and falling flat on her face at the top of the stairs.
VIDEO OF DRUNK HILLARY FALLING
Where there's smoke, there's fire.
Obama famously called her a drunk very publicly.
Obama: "Hillary won't stop drunk texting me!"


Top Opinion
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Queen B 2013/01/05 19:26:08It's a blood clot.

















No, I don't miss the ignorant frat-boy.
So the only images you have of Bush and alcohol are photoshopped - unlike Hillary, in the collage above she was publicly drinking and drunk.
Blood clots can occur under many different circumstances and in many different locations. Blood clots that form in response to an injury or a cut are beneficial, stopping potentially dangerous bleeding. However, a number of conditions can cause you to develop blood clots in critical locations, such as your lungs and brain, and they require medical attention.
Causes
Blood clots may form inside small veins near the surface of your skin (superficial phlebitis), resulting in localized redness, pain and swelling. Superficial phlebitis rarely causes complications and requires minimal treatment. Blood clots that form inside larger, deeper veins (deep vein thrombosis) may cause more widespread symptoms in the affected area, usually your leg, and can cause more-serious problems.
Blood clots may also break away from their original source and cause damage elsewhere in your body. Blood clots that break away from a deep vein thrombosis and travel to your lungs may cause a potentially life-threatening blood clot in the lungs (pulmonary embolism).
Blood clots that arise in one of the chambers of your heart, usually due to an irregular heart rhythm such as atrial fibrillation, may travel to your brain and cause a stroke. Blood clots that arise in the arteries of...
Blood clots can occur under many different circumstances and in many different locations. Blood clots that form in response to an injury or a cut are beneficial, stopping potentially dangerous bleeding. However, a number of conditions can cause you to develop blood clots in critical locations, such as your lungs and brain, and they require medical attention.
Causes
Blood clots may form inside small veins near the surface of your skin (superficial phlebitis), resulting in localized redness, pain and swelling. Superficial phlebitis rarely causes complications and requires minimal treatment. Blood clots that form inside larger, deeper veins (deep vein thrombosis) may cause more widespread symptoms in the affected area, usually your leg, and can cause more-serious problems.
Blood clots may also break away from their original source and cause damage elsewhere in your body. Blood clots that break away from a deep vein thrombosis and travel to your lungs may cause a potentially life-threatening blood clot in the lungs (pulmonary embolism).
Blood clots that arise in one of the chambers of your heart, usually due to an irregular heart rhythm such as atrial fibrillation, may travel to your brain and cause a stroke. Blood clots that arise in the arteries of the heart itself may block the flow of blood through that artery and cause a heart attack.
Blood clots that arise from within the carotid arteries in your neck may travel to the brain and cause a stroke.
Factors and conditions that can cause blood clots, as well as serious conditions that are associated with blood clots once they form and travel to other parts of your body, include:
Antiphospholipid syndrome
Arteriosclerosis / atherosclerosis
Buerger's disease
Deep vein thrombosis (DVT)
Essential thrombocythemia
Factor V Leiden
Family history of blood clots
Heart arrhythmias, including atrial fibrillation
Heart attack
Heart failure
Medications, such as oral contraceptives, hormone therapy drugs, tamoxifen
Peripheral artery disease (PAD)
Polycythemia vera
Pregnancy
Prolonged sitting or bed rest
Pulmonary embolism
Stroke
Surgery
Thrombocytosis
Thrombophlebitis
When to see a doctor
Seek emergency care if you experience:
Shortness of breath
Pressure, fullness or a squeezing pain in the center of your chest lasting more than a few minutes
Pain extending to your shoulder, arm, back, teeth or jaw
Sudden weakness or numbness of your face, arm or leg
Sudden difficulty speaking or understanding speech (aphasia)
Sudden blurred, double or decreased vision
Consult your doctor if you develop:
Swelling, redness, numbness or pain in a leg or arm
Intense burning or throbbing on your palms or soles
Chronic headache or dizziness
Self-care measures
To reduce your risk of developing blood clots, try these tips:
Avoid sitting for long periods. If you travel by airplane, walk the aisle periodically.
For car trips, stop and walk around frequently.
Move. After you've had surgery or been on bed rest, the sooner you move, the better.
Change your lifestyle.
Lose weight, lower high blood pressure, stop smoking and exercise regularly.
End of Mayo Clinic Information.
The thing to understand here is that a blood clot can start out in, for example, the leg. It can become dislodged and travel any where in the body and become stuck again.
If it does and it goes to
The Brain you can Stroke Out and Die.
Blood clots in the Brain can present with dizziness, slurred speech, loss of coordination (tripping over that opening between the plane and the jet way). Asymmetrical facial appearance.
The Heart you can have a Heart Attack and Die.
The Lungs your breathing becomes severely impaired and You Can Die.
Despite what her detractors are saying.
A Blot Clot Any where in the body is a serious issue and shouldn't be joked about Mocked or Otherwise NOT TAKEN SERIOUSLY.
Come on!
Than all on the video are drunk? Really!!!
Breaking her arm? Never heard of osteoperosis?
“Gossip, n: Hearing something you like about someone you don't.”
~Earl Wilson~
Cataloged as gossip:
All of Washington knows!
Where there is smoke there is fire!
It's now coming out that Nixon had a serious alcohol problem, besides being a homo. to boot (lol)
I really doubt she is but she has damn good reasons to be one...
Are you a loser sockpuppet? Yes...