Virtual Ministry Archive

BREAKING🚨 Trump says he’s “too busy with Iran” to commit to his own son’s wedding — and his own niece says that’s not a scheduling issue. It’s who he is. Mary Trump, a psychologist who has spent years dissecting this family, went on radio this week and flatly called her uncle “a horrible human being” and “a little Nazi.” She was responding to Trump’s comments about Donald Trump Jr.’s upcoming wedding to Palm Beach socialite Bettina Anderson. Asked if he’d attend, Trump told reporters he would “try and make it,” but said, “I have a thing called Iran and other things,” and described the bride only as “a person I’ve known for a long time.” Public schedules showed he had planned to spend that weekend at his Bedminster golf club before abruptly announcing he’d stay in Washington instead. Mary Trump’s reaction was simple: “Give me a break.” In an interview highlighted by The Daily Beast, she said he doesn’t want to go because “he can’t stand his kid,” and argued that the excuse about “Iran and other things” is just classic Trump spin. In her view, this isn’t about one event. It’s about a lifelong pattern: a man desperate to be adored, but “incapable of loving people in a healthy way.” She’s said for years that her uncle shows classic traits of malignant narcissism — no empathy, no real intimacy, no genuine connection — and that on some level he knows it, which is where the constant rage and grievance come from. You can see that coldness everywhere once you know to look for it. The way he talks about wounded and fallen soldiers as “losers.” The cruelty toward immigrants and refugees. The complete inability to express anything like normal concern when ordinary people are harmed by his policies. Now that same emotional void is playing out in his own family, in public, over something as basic as showing up for his son’s wedding. And yet this is the man still sold to America as a “family values” champion, a Christian defender of traditional marriage and fatherhood. The guy who can’t even clear his calendar for his oldest son; who refers to the bride, not by her name, but as “a person I’ve known for a long time”; who treats the possibility of attending like a PR trap rather than a moment of joy. Mary Trump has been warning for years that her uncle’s brokenness isn’t just a private tragedy — it’s a public danger. If someone is fundamentally unable to care about the people closest to him, why would we expect him to care about anyone else: the troops he sends into war, the communities torn apart by his immigration raids, the families staring down medical bills he wants to rip coverage from? He tells us who he is every day. His own niece is just making sure we don’t look away. If you appreciate my posts, it would mean the world if you followed my page. Thank you for being here.