Or if you voted for a third party candidate, congratulations, it's your victory, too.
It seems quite unfair to vilify the people who could not bring themselves to vote for Hillary Clinton, or simply agreed more with Jill Stein, Gary Johnson et al, instead of supporting the person you chose, Frelga. That's what a democracy is - everyone votes as they like, and the rest of us have to accept that choice, even if we don't agree with it.
I think there is plenty of blame to go around: Hilary Clinton herself and the Democratic National Committee; the Republican party that rallied around Trump simply because he was Republican, even if they didn't like what he was saying; the media that prioritized their own ratings and gave Trump plenty of free publicity instead of presenting a true, focused, critical discussion of the actual issues (and occasionally blew his off-the-cuff statements out of proportion, to the point where even I rolled my eyes at the obvious bias); the current U.S. culture where personalities seem to matter more than substance.
Trump and the Republicans have won, and bitter words won't heal the divisions in this country or reduce the intolerance I see on both sides - liberals as well as conservatives. And personally, I'm not going to yell "the sky is falling" until I actually see what Trump does in office. (though I reserve the right to do it then.
). I would have accorded Clinton the same courtesy, despite thinking that she's a political weathervane that blows in whatever direction will get her elected, and too much of a hawk and a friend to corporations and lobbyists - though I did think her the lesser of two evils, and thought she might have made an OK president in the end.
btw, thanks C_G for being gracious. Though I don't like or support Trump, I thought he was also surprisingly gracious in his acceptance speech.