
What This Site Is and Is Not
This site is not a news outlet, a campaign platform, or a call to violence. It is a moral examination of documented words and actions, measured against clearly stated ethical standards. Readers are encouraged to examine the sources, challenge the reasoning, and reach their own conclusions.
This site exists to examine a serious moral question:
Is Trump evil?
Our conclusion is yes, Trump Is Evil, not as an insult or a slogan, but by definition.
We are a group of individuals committed to presenting documented, vetted information about Donald Trump’s public behavior, rhetoric, and record. Our goal is not outrage for its own sake, but clarity. We believe the health of a democracy depends on the moral character of those who seek power over it.
Throughout this site, evil is defined not as a supernatural label or a partisan insult, but as a sustained pattern of behavior marked by an absence of empathy, deliberate division, and disregard for the harm done to others.
Our Moral Framework
A good person is good to others. A good person acts with empathy, compassion, and an awareness of shared humanity. Such a person sees beyond superficial differences of race, gender, sexual orientation, social status, and nationality, and relates to the common human essence within us all.
By contrast, evil is marked by the absence of empathy and by behavior that deliberately divides people against one another.
Scripture explicitly condemns this kind of conduct.
Proverbs 6:14 (ESV) “With perverted heart devises evil, continually sowing discord;”
Here, sowing discord is not described as a political tactic or a leadership style, but as a moral failing rooted in a corrupted heart.
Words That Divide
Donald Trump has repeatedly used rhetoric that frames fellow Americans as enemies rather than as citizens with differing views. In an October 2024 Fox News town hall event, he stated:
“We have two enemies. We have the outside enemy, and then we have the enemy from within, and the enemy from within, in my opinion, is more dangerous than China, Russia and all these countries … They’re Marxists and communists and fascists, and they’re sick. … The more difficult are, you know, the Pelosis — these people, they’re so sick, and they’re so evil.”
This language does not merely criticize political opponents. It casts them as an internal threat to the nation itself.
Scripture addresses this behavior directly.
Proverbs 6:19 (ESV) “A false witness who breathes out lies, and one who sows discord among brothers.”
The emphasis is not only on falsehood, but on the damage caused by turning people against one another.
Empathy and Evil
Psychologist Steve Taylor, Ph.D., writing for Psychology Today, describes evil people as those who are unable to empathize with others. Their own needs and desires dominate their thinking. Other human beings have value only insofar as they can be used, exploited, or discarded. This inability to recognize the emotions, suffering, and rights of others is what makes cruelty possible.
Throughout his public life, Donald Trump has repeatedly demonstrated this absence of empathy. He has objectified women, mocked people with physical disabilities, and made openly bigoted statements. He has consistently framed entire groups of people as threats or enemies, fostering division rather than unity.
This divisiveness stands in direct opposition to e pluribus unum, the foundational ideal of the United States: out of many, one.
A Christian Warning
While this site draws on Christian scripture where relevant, the moral standards discussed here are not exclusive to any faith tradition. For those who identify as Christian, however, the New Testament offers an especially clear warning.
Romans 16:17–18 (ESV) “I appeal to you, brothers, to watch out for those who cause divisions and create obstacles contrary to the doctrine that you have been taught; avoid them. For such persons do not serve our Lord Christ, but their own appetites, and by smooth talk and flattery they deceive the hearts of the naive.”
Here, division is explicitly linked to self-interest, deception, and the pursuit of personal appetite rather than service to others.
Why This Matters
Donald Trump is not a savior. He is a wealthy entertainer with a long history of impulsive behavior, self-aggrandizement, and disregard for the harm his actions cause. His inherited power and wealth have insulated him from accountability, even as a long record of litigation and fraud allegations has raised persistent questions about ethical conduct.
Since entering politics, he has also encouraged millions to accept unsubstantiated and dangerously divisive claims as fact, positioning himself as the sole solution to complex global problems. This combination of narcissism, manipulation, and moral indifference poses a genuine threat to democratic institutions.
Allowing a person who consistently demonstrates these traits unfettered access to the highest office in the United States would have profound consequences, not only for this country but for the world.
This site exists because examining these facts is not optional.
It is a civic responsibility.