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President Donald Trump made a startling confession about his afterlife, admitting he may never walk through the pearly gates of heaven.
While speaking to reporters on board Air Force One on Sunday, the president was asked by Fox News reporter Peter Doocy about prior comments he made about the afterlife. In August, he claimed his efforts to broker a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine was motivated by his desire to get into heaven.
‘If I can save 7,000 people a week from getting killed, that’s pretty good,’ Trump said. ‘I want to try and get to heaven, if possible. I’m hearing I’m not doing well. I am really at the bottom of the totem pole. But if I can get to heaven, this will be one of the reasons.’
However, now the commander-in-chief has a much more grim view of his eternal destiny.
“I’m being a little cute,” Trump said, referencing his previous comments. ‘I don’t think there’s anything going to get me in heaven.’
‘I really don’t. I think I’m not maybe heaven-bound. I may be in heaven right now as we fly on Air Force One.’
Trump paused before adding, ‘I’m not sure I’m going to be able to make heaven, but I’ve made life a lot better for a lot of people.’
He went on to bash former President Joe Biden for allowing Vladimir Putin to invade Ukraine, adding that ‘millions’ of people would be alive today ‘had the election of 2020 not been rigged.’

Trump speculated that he may not make it to heaven but is glad that he’s been able to make ‘life a lot better for a lot of people’

The president received a hero’s welcome when he entered the Israeli parliament on Monday morning after brokering peace between Israel and Hamas

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu welcomed Trump to the Knesset
The president made these comments while flying to Israel to oversee the release of the remaining Israeli hostages, ending a bloody two-year war that has rocked the Gaza region.
Trump, 79, is one of the first presidents in history to openly speculate about his eternal damnation to the American public.
Throughout his political career, and even during his time as New York real estate mogul, Trump has talked about damnation and the afterlife.
Following the July assasination attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania, Trump reaffirmed his belief in a heaven and hell.
‘I do [believe in heaven],’ Trump said in an interview with Fox News. ‘If I’m good, I’m going to heaven. And if I’m bad, I’m going someplace else.’
‘Well, I pray for our country. I pray, obviously. I pray for the same thing you pray—our family and our country,’ he added, ‘and I guess we have a world. I pray for the world too.’
During the early 1990s, Trump described himself as non-religious and often distanced himself from Christian doctrine.
‘I don’t believe in reincarnation, heaven or hell—but we go someplace,’ the future president told Playboy in 1990. ‘Do you know, I cannot, for the life of me, figure out where.’
Over two decades later Trump had reconciled his difference with Christianity and described himself a church-goer. During the start of his Republican presidential campaign in 2015, Trump suggested the presidency may be his only ticket to God’s kingdom.

By the time Trump landed in Israel all the remaining Israeli hostages were released by Hamas
‘So go out and spread the word and once I get in [to the White House], I will do my thing that I do very well,” Trump told a large crowd of evangelical pastors in Orlando, according to Time.
‘And I figure it’s probably maybe the only way I’m going to get to heaven. So I better do a good job.’