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An adaption of American novelist George R. R. Martin's epic fantasy novels, A Song of Ice and Fire, Game of Thrones is a popular TV series which chronicles the violent dynastic struggles among the realm's noble families for the Iron Throne.
Now, the two titles make perfect sense for a political allegory of the 2016 U.S. presidential campaign.
On one hand, the Game of Thrones between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump is like a raging wildfire, with dramatic flames hard to be put out; on the other hand, policy issues the presidential election should be focusing on are like a deep iceberg, with few chances to see the light.
That's why so many voters in the battleground states of Pennsylvania and Ohio are torn apart to choose from the two most disliked presidential candidates in American history -- Republican presidential nominee Trump and his Democratic rival Clinton.
Emotionally depressed by and fed up with this long and nastiest election season dominated by personal attacks, they could never tell what is the denouement of the game of power.
This year, "October Surprise" -- uNPRedictable development that has the firepower to alter the trajectory of the White House race -- has set a new record, though U.S. presidential campaigns are never short of the uNPRedictable.
On the first of the month, a bombshell report indicating Trump managed to lose 916 million U.S. dollars in 1995 in a business failure that could have allowed him to avoid paying federal income taxes for at least 18 years was not even close to a surprise.
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