Well, that's all he has to say. As soon as Moore is done discussing the angry white male, he's finished talking about Trump as well. After half an hour (at most), he veers over to the subject of Hillary Clinton, and why Republicans hate her with such religious passion. Now, Hillary is not exactly an unworthy, or irrelevant, topic in this electoral season. Yet the intensity, the insanity, the singularity of the election -- and, let's be honest, the whole come-on of Moore's movie -- is rooted in the mystique of Donald Trump. And Trump deserves the full force of Michael Moore's analysis. Moore, in my opinion, wrote the single most penetrating piece that's been written about this election -- his over-the-summer missive entitled "5 Reasons Why Trump Will Win." That title may sound out of date, in light of the sexual revelations that will likely be the key torpedo of Trump's candidacy, yet really: Can we so blithely dismiss his popularity before that fatal videotape? Can we be so sure he wouldn't have won? Unlike much of the mainstream media, Moore can't be accused of reveling in a cavalier dismissal of the Trump phenomenon. He has pointedly critiqued that dismissal.