I don't know who will win and I think it is a very interesting contest. American politics are skewed through the Electoral College and it seems, repeatedly, to come down to about 500-600 voters in one or other state, often Florida.
If Trump wins, it says a couple of things: on the one hand, there are some very wealthy people involved whose interests are being served. On the other hand, there are sections of the population who are embittered for one reason or another, and feel their prejudices are embodied and voiced by Trump, however irrationally or illogically. And it may say that he won because of those voters who abstained because they found themselves between a rock and a hard place. I can see why people would be disillusioned with politics.
But there is a whole machinery of governance at state and district level and it looks to me, from the limited amount I know, that there are many able and dedicated people working there. We may see opposition galvanised and coalescing where there are shared interests, moderating a Trump administration. There's more than one way to skin a cat.
In the UK, we have a Labour government with a huge majority, but also significant groupings in parliament left and right of the government. The left are already forming a coalition and I'm interested to see how this will play out.
Of course, we're just a small set of islands floating about in the North Sea and neither here nor there in the great scheme of things.