In this case, for everything other than discussing the accuracy of polls, I'd agree with you for sure. But what bothers me is that, by implication, a poll -- any poll -- that predicted a Trump win was "more accurate", no matter the scale. There were some highly unscientific, poorly-conducted, opt-in polls available around the internet that would have indicated a thumping Trump win by a landslide -- 538-0, even. But such polls are clearly bogus. Are we seriously suggesting, though, that because they predicted a Trump win, and we got a Trump win (at a vastly different scale), they are somehow *more* accurate or trustworthy?!
We have to pay far more attention to the uncertainty attached to predictions, and far less to the central value, than previously. In answer to ludwig -- yes, newspapers are guilty of that. As I suggested in my long post, polls have perhaps become too great a part of the narrative.
Incidentally, Khandro, I also predicted a Trump win (in conversation with several friends on or about June 24th). Doesn't make me superior to pollsters.