McLeod, MacLeod, M'Leod, McCloud, Macleod, take your pick. One way or another Donald Trump and I are linked in the great genetic daisy chain of misty isles, loud tartans, terrible food, and worse weather.
As the only human being on the planet claiming a blood tie willingly - 100th cousin 85 times removed? - with the presidential hopeful let me say that if the world was as it should be he'd have his mother's surname, and mine, and there'd be no avoiding it. If we were Black Power we'd be bros.
Somewhere way back in time - it all began in the Middle Ages - our McLeod forebears will have caved each other's skulls in with claymores or stabbed each other with dirks in one of those endless Scottish feuds, which they elevated to an art form. Or they will have exchanged friendly gutterals in their native Gaelic over a shot of whiskey - or a dirty great tankard full if my great-great grandfather is any guide. The earth around our pioneer family cottage was littered with square gin bottles for a century after his demise, and doubtless many more remain. It would have been cheaper, you see, the square gin.
My McLeod father was fonder of a tipple than just about anything else, apart from Pall Mall plains. And by coincidence one of Trump's brothers died at the age of 42 the worse for liquor, a possible reason why Trump isn't known as a drinker.
Such things should be borne in mind by the American public, who may yet make a president out of my distant kinsman. Give him an arsenal of super-deadly weapons and a feud to seethe over and the planet will likely be obliterated, as were all the pesky inhabitants of the island of Eigg, they say, hundreds of them, who the McLeods found hiding in a cave in 1577 and suffocated. Something to do with a feud with the MacDonalds, and bothering girls, were in the background. There was no television in those days.