Millions of words have already been written about Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, but if you don't know who you will be voting for by now, we hope this helps you decide.

We recommend Clinton.

Want a good enough reason?

Donald Trump.

But Trump, a potentially dangerous demagogue, is not the only reason we support Clinton. We support Clinton for her many accomplishments and strengths.

Even Trump admitted that Clinton is a fighter. When she failed, as first lady, to radically change the American health care system back in the 1990s, she did not retreat and lick her wounds. She jumped back into the political fray and helped enact a more modest but important expansion of health-care access to poor children.

When she won her New York Senate seat in 2000, she did not hold grudges against those who had lambasted her husband during his impeachment. According to the Washington Post, “colleagues in both parties found her to be businesslike, knowledgeable, intent on accomplishment, willing to work across the aisle and less focused than most on getting credit.”

As a two-term senator, who was re-elected with 67 percent of the vote, Clinton worked harder than anyone to secure $20 billion to rebuild New York after 9/11 and provide health care for responders who got sick from working at Ground Zero.

But let’s look deeper into Clinton’s background. After graduating from Yale Law School, she decided to work for the Children’s Defense Fund when many of her fellow classmates sought high-paying law firm jobs.

In the Senate, at a time when Congress wouldn't do enough for small towns, Clinton launched an innovative partnership in New York with eBay and local colleges to provide small businesses with tech support, microloans and training programs.

At the State Department, she successfully negotiated a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, no easy task. And let’s not forget her famous speech in China on women’s rights.

In short, she is experienced and steady. Her time in the State Department has given her the tools to work as president with our allies to wipe out ISIS. She has laid out a plan to defeat ISIS by taking out ISIS’s stronghold in Iraq and Syria. She has more foreign policy chops than President Obama and is not afraid to take bold action to keep us safe.

We also support several of her platform issues, including her plan to lower health care costs, particularly prescription drug costs and out-of-pocket medical costs. She wants to improve, not repeal, the Affordable Care Act.

Here on the Cape and Islands, where small businesses are so important, Clinton has a plan to provide mentoring and training to entrepreneurs and give tax breaks to small business with fewer than five employees. She also wants to create a new standard deduction for small businesses.

Despite her strengths, we realize Clinton is also a flawed candidate. We are troubled by her lack of transparency, from the closed meetings of her health-care panel in 1993 to the emails she destroyed after leaving the State Department. We are also concerned about the potential costs of some of her proposals, such as expanding Social Security.

But Clinton is a candidate who has learned as much from her political mistakes as she has from her successes. As such, her battle scars make her uniquely prepared for the White House.

She is not the demon that some on the far right like to portray her. On Benghazi, for example, eight investigations, which cost taxpayers $7 million, revealed little to fault Clinton for that tragic event. In fact, U.S. Rep. Kevin McCarthy, R-California, who was in line to replace House Speaker John Boehner, admitted that the investigations were politically motivated to damage Clinton’s reputation.

Now let’s consider Clinton’s opponent. Trump is a cartoonish, thin-skinned playboy who was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. He refuses to release his taxes, and has no policy experience. We are appalled at how he treats women, people with disabilities, even a Gold Star Muslim family.

A Trump administration would be far too unpredictable to entrust with the highest office in the land.

Again, while Clinton is far from perfect, we wholeheartedly recommend her for president.