[@Leos Klien]I entirely respect his openly frank nature. For a politician to cut the crap and actually give straight answers is very refreshing, and I can understand why the American people appreciate that. I just wish those views he is so keen to share didn't seem to be rooted in Dark Ages mentality. Of course, I didn't think Clinton was capable of running a country either, so hey ho. I'd like to say that it doesn't bother me because I'm Scottish, but I don't truly believe that. Whoever sits in the White House holds a lion's share of the responsibility for the fate of the rest of the world - regardless of whether we like that or not - and all of Scotland's un-elected political leaders have condemned Trump. Labour called him a racist bigot, the Greens called him a racist liar, the Tories called him a bigoted liar, and the Lib Dems weren't worth listening to anyway. Which I find funny, because he got elected despite all that, while they can't. Sounds a lot like jealousy, but it does prove the point at the very start of this. It seems in this day and age, people couldn't care less how controversial your views on a subject really are - if you are willing to openly give your views in the first place. Politicians never answer a question they can dodge, even if it is a completely benign and pointless one. When every elected official in a country puts more stock into lies and misdirection than the truth, it plays it's Trump card. And as much as i'm a little unnerved by the prospect of a Trump presidency, I'm extremely interested in seeing the results.