Apparently, even Donald Trump himself knows where he’s headed when his days on this Earth are through — and it’s not “up.”
This morning, US President Donald J. Trump boarded Air Force One to embark for Israel, where he would be delivering a big speech before the Knesset, Israel’s legislative body, regarding the peace deal he brokered between Israel and Gaza. While aboard the presidential plane, a member of the press questioned him about his impending afterlife — a topic that Donald has actually made several bizarre comments about in recent weeks — and it seems Trump himself has resigned himself to the fact that he won’t be spending eternity inside the Pearly Gates.
The question was posted to the president by Fox News reporter Peter Doocy, who said, “A couple weeks ago you were doing an interview and you talked about how you hoped to end the war in Ukraine because it might help you get into heaven,” referencing Trump’s recent comments, in which he admitted that his motivation for trying to broker peace between Russia and Ukraine is derived from his desire to go to Heaven when he dies.
“How does this help? Does this help?” Doocy asked, with regard to the new peace deal between Israel and Hamas.
“I mean, I’m being a little cute,” Trump said, laughing a bit uncomfortably as he went on to admit that an afterlife in Heaven probably isn’t in the cards for him.
“I don’t think there’s anything gonna get me in heaven, I really don’t… I think I’m maybe not heaven-bound,” Trump told the Fox News reporter. “I may be in heaven right now as we fly in Air Force One, I’m not sure I’m going to be able to make heaven. But I’ve made life better for a lot of people.”
The 79-year-old POTUS has made several thinly veiled references to his death and afterlife in recent weeks.
Back in August, he made the first in a series of afterlife references when he admitted that he hoped that bringing an end to the ongoing war between Russia and Ukraine would help ensure that he goes “to Heaven” when he dies.
“You know, [people] get punished if they’re not good, right?” Trump said back in August during an interview with conservative talk radio host Todd Starnes.
“If you don’t think about that, if you’re not a believer, and you believe you go nowhere, what’s the reason to be good, really? There has to be some kind of a report card up there someplace, you know, like, let’s go to heaven, let’s get into heaven, and it’s sort of a beautiful thing.”
Just last week, Donald made yet another reference to his impending afterlife when he said with his whole chest that without the promise of eternity behind the Pearly Gates, there was “no reason to be good.”
“I want to be good because you want to prove to God you’re good, so you go to that next step, right?” he said.
During a White House press conference just last week, he once again said of an eternity in Heaven after his death: “That’s very important to me. I think it’s really, very important.”
It’s worth noting here that questions and speculations have been swirling regarding the president’s health after he made a scheduled visit to Walter Reed last week, in what the White House has tried to play off as his “routine yearly check-up.”
However, Americans were quick to point out that this is actually Donald’s second “annual” check-up just this year, while Conservative attorney and staunch Trump critic George Conway noted a particularly key detail in the readout from Trump’s White House physician, in which the doctor confirmed that the president received “advanced imaging” during his visit.
I’m certainly starting to wonder if Donald Trump knows that his afterlife is coming sooner than we think, and he’s simply accepting the fact that he’s going to Hell sooner rather than later, so why try to be good at all?
You can watch the clip of Trump’s remarks here:
Trump: I don’t think there’s anything that’s going to get me into heaven. I think I’m not heaven bound. I’m not sure I’m going to be able make heaven pic.twitter.com/gzPwKnd5j0
— Acyn (@Acyn) October 12, 2025
Featured image via video screen capture
