Google the words “Redskins’’ and “dysfunction’’ and what you will find are more entries on your computer than you can fit inside of team’s 79,000-seat FedEx Field home stadium.

Add the words “Daniel’’ and “Snyder’’ to that Google search and you will risk blowing up your laptop with information overload.

It’s difficult to believe the Redskins, once one of the most storied franchises in the NFL, have been one of the sorriest franchises— not only in the NFL, but in professional sports — for the last decade-and-a-half.

To trace the failures of the last 16 seasons leads you directly to the owner’s box.

Sure, there have been head coaches who have not worked out for varying reasons, players who have not been that good. But when you unearth everything that has taken place in Washington, team owner Daniel Snyder is the common denominator.

He has too often meddled. He has made a habit of overspending on players who have not warranted the price he’s paid for their talent.

He has hired more head coaches than Elizabeth Taylor had husbands.

In his 16 years, Snyder has managed to alienate the team’s wildly loyal fan base, delivering just four winning seasons and two playoff victories and doing it with arrogance.

Since Snyder bought the team in 1999, the Redskins, who are 3-10 this season entering Sunday’s game against the Giants at MetLife Stadium, are 107-146 and have shown no consistency or continuity.

Not one time has there been consecutive winning seasons in the Snyder era. The team never has won more than 10 games and never reached an NFC Championship game.

Since 2009, the Redskins are 31-62 in the regular season, tied with Oakland for the fifth fewest victories in the NFL over that span.

This season marks the eighth double-digit loss record in the Snyder era and the fifth in the last six years.

The Redskins are 6-23 over the last two seasons, tied with the perennial NFL weaklings Oakland, Tampa Bay and Jacksonville for the worst record in the league during that span.

To illustrate just how bad the Redskins have been under Snyder, you only need to look at the 16 years before he bought the team. From 1983 -98, the Redskins had 11 winning seasons, eight double-digit win records, seven playoff berths, three Super Bowl trips, two Super Bowl titles and a 12-5 record in the postseason.

Regrets? Snyder, who despite his complete lack of success has made millions on top of millions,surely would tell you he has none.

Coaches? Well, he has had a few.

Current coach Jay Gruden, who’s in his first season in Washington and is already rumored to be a possible firing victim, is Snyder’s eighth head coach in 16 years.

The current state of the Redskins can best be described as calamitous, with supposed franchise quarterback Robert Griffin III, who was a sensation as a rookie in 2012, now looked upon as broken — physically and mentally.

Griffin’s backup, Kirk Cousins, who was also drafted in 2012, was thought of so highly before this season he was considered prime trade bait. But when Griffin struggled and was injured and Cousins had to play, he was exposed as not what everyone thought he would be. So much for trade leverage.

Colt McCoy also has taken a crack at starting, also to sketchy results.

Amidst it all, there are constant reports of Gruden and Griffin not seeing eye to eye _ as evidenced by a public dress-down Gruden delivered to RG3 after he’d made some comments that were perceived to selfish.

As happens when high-profile teams struggle so badly, anonymous sources have leaked sordid behind-the-scenes details.

Before the Redskins’ loss to the Rams last week, TMZ quoted an unidentified starter as saying that playing with Griffin “has been a nightmare,” adding Griffin had lost the confidence of his teammates, stayed “secluded” from them and had grown complacent.

On Sunday, former Redskins linebacker London Fletcher ripped Redskins defensive coordinator Jim Haslett on CBS’s nationally televised pregame show, calling him “clueless’’ and wondering why he still has a job after five years of “ineptitude.”

“This is a guy that would take the ’85 Bears and turn them into a mediocre defense,” Fletcher said. “He is clueless. He has no idea what he is doing. Believe me, I had a front row seat for four years.”

Ouch.

Adding to the Redskins’ embarrassing season, before last week’s game, Rams coach Jeff Fisher sent to midfield for the coin toss the six players they acquired as a result of the king’s ransom the Redskins gave to them to trade up and draft Griffin.

Then the Rams went out and waxed Washington 24-0 at FedEx Field.

On Wednesday, a rather violent brawl broke out during a Redskins practice between rookie cornerback Bashaud Breeland and receiver Andre Roberts.

Surely, the fracas left every Redskins fan wondering this: “If only their team would show that much fight on Sundays … ’’

And to think: The Redskins thought their biggest problem this season would be that silly, politically correct controversy over their team nickname.

Fail to the Redskins.