Obliterating Islamic state will prove more of a challenge for Trump, not to mention sorting out Afghanistan, but where there's a will there's a way.
Picture the Donald standing with full tankard (he would have been a drinker then because of the foul water) in the medieval McLeod hall and vowing to build a wall to keep out the MacDonalds, or the Mexicans, or Muslims in variety. "It will be a bigger victory than Eigg!" I hear him cry, in gutterals. And the clansmen would start up the bagpipes in eager anticipation. "Aye, I will build a wall, and the MacDonalds will pay for it!" he would cry, wearing one of those Viking hats with horns poking out either side. He would allude to the McLeods' glorious history, The Battle of Bloody Bay and The Battle of the Spoiling Dyke among them. What pictures they'd conjure up of skulls and gizzards and gory destruction. We weren't of Viking descent for nothing.
Trump's McLeods, of Lewis and Raasay, fought at Culloden on the English side, a lapse of judgment - or treachery - that my McLeods, of Dunvegan and Harris, promptly burned and pillaged them for. So Trump has to know, deep in his ancestral bones, that things won't always go his way.
They did for his mum, though, when she arrived in New York, fresh from the Isle of Lewis, intending to be a servant. Within a few years she had married Trump's father, Fred, who became very rich.
Mary Anne Macleod (sic) was an attractive young woman. Though we McLeods may be descended from a chap called Leod, a name derived from the Old Norse for ugly, one theory traces Trump's branch to "Helga of the beautiful hair." Genetics are such that you can see this in a Trump family photograph of 1994. Both The Donald and his mother wear big, blonde, candyfloss dos, as he does to this day, a miracle of spun sugar.
Trump's maternal grandfather was called Malcolm, as was my great great uncle who, according to my father, was wont to wander the hills of our own Dunvegan playing the bagpipes, somewhat light in the head department due to some nebulously described accident.
My father's tales of his family, though inventive and often amusing, could not always be relied on. And this is the risk my distant kinsman runs, of running away with himself, as it were, due to the inherent hilarity of the situation he finds himself in. His love affair with the American gun lobby may look a little less appealing this week, what with a five-year-old girl killing herself accidentally with her father's gun, but we Scots have strong stomachs.
The bones of our enemies littered our island shores for centuries and I dare say American bones will lie in similar fashion on various continents when Trump Macleod has tidied up the world to his satisfaction. Never a dull moment will be his epitaph.
- Rosemary McLeod is a journalist and author.