He is obviously feeling on the ropes in regards to the Brexit vote or in denial... Although I would like to point out, I didn't retaliate with name calling, I decided to stick to facts I wonder if we should start adding a disclaimer explaining we know it is a vote, we know we haven't exited yet...
Me get personal? I give it out in exactly the same way paul and olof give it to me.... A question you have ducked... When you said Trump won the majority of votes in the us election, Can you explain the statement?
At 10:58am I said Majority Voted Trump and Majority Voted Brexit, I did not elaborate on that, I was just stating a fact that two outcomes had been reached by two different countries going to the polls. The voting system for Brexit was simple, Yes or No whichever is highest wins, we voted Brexit. Voting system for the USA is straightforward, whoever wins the most states wins. As you wish to split hairs and you wish to word play (as WJ pointed out) At 10:58am there was no mention of who would win the popular vote, I have seen that at 12pm (an hour after I posted) the popular vote was 47.7 Clinton and 47.5 Trump so if it makes you happy and stops the tears then in the way you want to interpret it, Clinton was more popular but as this was not known when you claimed "liar" you was having a stab in the dark. You made a 'liar' claim with no evidence, I think somewhere you even admitted to not knowing if the popular votes statistics had been released. It might have been that Trump was also in the lead at 10:58am with the popular vote. Hope that clears it up for you.
Trump wasnt in the lead of the popular vote at 10.58 and clearly a minority of people voted for Trump. As you rightly said you never mentioned the electoral college ( fecking stupid system if you ask me). You brexiteers are great at rewriting history.
The polls had closed but the popular vote figure had not been released by then. As of Wednesday evening, hours after Clinton called Trump to concede, the former secretary of state clung to a narrow lead in the popular vote, 47.7%-47.5%. The totals will continue to change as absentee votes trickle in. http://edition.cnn.com/2016/11/09/politics/donald-trump-hillary-clinton-popular-vote/