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Wednesday, 9 November 2016

Trumps victory causing anger and grief






At 2.30am on Wednesday, a young fellow in a red cap Make America Great Again  climbed a tree by the White House door and yelled: "Donald Trump is the following president of our nation."

Around him, noisy boos rang out from the group as breaking-news cautions affirmed what the man had quite recently reported.

"F*** Donald Trump, F*** Donald Trump," then turned out in a unified chorale from the several chiefly youngsters who had assembled outside the president's home, a number of them in expectation of praising the decision of the principal female president of the United States.

In any case, from state after express, the numbers that came in were baffling for the Clinton camp. What examiners and surveyors had considered impossible, gradually happened.

Feelings ran high in the group, with a few people transparently sobbing and others rising with outrage.

"I truly need to punch somebody," one man snapped at a little gathering of Trump supporters who sang "na, na, hello, farewell", coordinated at Clinton.

Individuals from United We Dream, a battle gather for undocumented migrants whom Trump needs expelled, droned "Undocumented, unafraid".

In any case, neither this nor or the open antagonistic vibe of the group could stop Jacob Weaver from safeguarding his decision for president and his movement approach.

Wearing a suit and the notorious red trucker cap, Weaver, who is at present an understudy in Washington DC, talked about his fervor about expanded outskirt controls, Trump's assessment proposition and his "America first" arrangement in remote relations.

As opposed to isolating America as Trump's rivals fear, Weaver considers, the Republican will really unite the nation.

Still, Nisreen Mohammed, a Muslim lady wearing a headscarf, was not persuaded.

"I think the standpoint for Muslims will be exceptionally troublesome in the following four years, perhaps the most noticeably awful it's ever been," she said. "I'm stunned. I didn't think this was conceivable."

Kevin Harper, an African-American man, said he was apathetic regarding a Trump triumph. The nation would not have fared any better under a Clinton administration, he said.

Still, he thought it was a noteworthy night and chose to go to the White House.

"I needed to have the capacity to state I was at the White House when the fiend was chosen president," Harper said.

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