VIDEO OF THE NOW

Friday, March 20, 2026

How Trump's Humble Beginnings as a Door to Door Bible Salesman Shaped his Apocalyptical Foreign Policy of Today

Donald Trump selling Bibles to customers in the Drive Thru at McDonalds (circa 1974)

 

In the summer of 1975, a young, ambitious Donald J. Trump—then just a brash 29-year-old real estate heir with a comb-over that could deflect incoming artillery—embarked on what he would later call his "most tremendous, faith-based business venture ever." Ditching the family penthouse for a beat-up station wagon loaded with gold-embossed "Trump Special Edition" Holy Bibles (complete with a foreword promising "the best salvation, believe me"), young Donald hit the suburbs door-to-door, peddling scripture like it was prime Manhattan waterfront property.
" Folks, these Bibles are yuge," he'd boom at startled housewives in plaid suburbs. "They're the greatest Bibles—tremendous leather, beautiful red, and they have my face embossed right there on the cover. It's like owning a piece of heaven, but better because it's branded. Nobody does branding like me."
His sales pitch was relentless: eternal life, forgiveness of sins, and a free "Make America Holy Again" bumper sticker if you bought two. Rejections? Mere "fake news" from "low-energy" homeowners. But everything changed when Trump rolled into Wheaton, Illinois, for the 1975 Bible Prophecy Conference—a gathering of end-times enthusiasts who could spot the Antichrist in a grainy Polaroid.
There, amid folding chairs and lukewarm coffee, Trump set up his folding table in the lobby, hawking his wares between sessions. That's when he bumped into the heavy hitters: Hal Lindsey, fresh off the mega-success of The Late Great Planet Earth (which had already convinced millions the Rapture was basically next Tuesday), and Jack Van Impe, the man who'd confidently newsletter-ed "Messiah 1975?" just months earlier.
Picture it: Trump, in his wide-lapel suit, thrusting a Bible at Lindsey. "Hal, my friend, this is the Bible for winners. It's got prophecy, it's got maps—your book is great, but mine has my autograph. People are saying it's the best."
Lindsey, ever the gentleman, politely declined but chatted anyway. Van Impe, eyes wide with apocalyptic fervor, grabbed one and flipped through it, muttering about Gog and Magog. Trump listened intently as the two laid out the roadmap: Russia (the big bad North) invading Israel any day now, the European Common Market morphing into the revived Roman Empire, China rising as the kings of the East, nuclear Armageddon as the bowl judgments, and—crucially—a strong leader who would stand with Israel against all odds, hastening the final showdown.
Trump nodded vigorously. "Beautiful. Very beautiful. Israel—great people, fantastic ally. We need to protect them, big league. And Russia? Bad hombres. We're gonna have to deal with that."
The encounter was brief, but transformative. Trump left Wheaton not just with a suitcase full of unsold Bibles (he later wrote them off as a "tremendous charitable donation"), but with a prophetic vision that would shape his worldview for decades. Forget zoning laws and casino deals—the real estate of the future was biblical geopolitics.
Fast-forward to his presidency(s), and the fruits of that 1975 lobby chat became crystal clear. Trump's foreign policy? Pure Lindsey-Van Impe remix, served with extra ketchup.
  • Moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem? Straight out of Lindsey's playbook—check the prophecy boxes for recognizing Israel's biblical capital and triggering the endgame timeline.
  • Cozying up to Netanyahu while trash-talking Iran? Classic "kings of the East" preparation—gotta get those armies marching toward Armageddon.
  • Tariffs on China, tough talk on Russia? Obviously identifying the players in Ezekiel 38–39. ("Gog from the land of Magog—probably Putin, folks. Very nasty.")
  • Pulling out of deals, building walls, and generally accelerating global chaos? Accelerating the Tribulation timeline, baby. Why delay the inevitable when you can make it great again?
Critics whine that this brinkmanship is hurtling us toward World War III, with nukes flying, economies collapsing, and the four horsemen stuck in traffic on the 405. But Trump supporters know better: it's all according to plan. The Late Great Planet Earth isn't late—it's just fashionably delayed. Any day now, the Rapture hits, believers get beamed up (Trump Tower penthouse views included), and the rest of us get the Tribulation special: seven years of plagues, beasts, and bad hair days.
Thanks to a door-to-door Bible salesman who crashed a prophecy conference in Wheaton, we're finally on the fast track to the end times. Peace through superior firepower—and superior branding.
This article is a complete parody and work of satirical fiction. No historical evidence exists that Donald Trump ever sold Bibles door-to-door, attended a 1975 Bible Prophecy Conference in Wheaton, IL, or met Hal Lindsey and Jack Van Impe under such circumstances. The connections to his foreign policy are exaggerated for humorous effect. None of this actually happened. It's all made up. Please don't @ me with fact-checks—I'm trying to have fun before the hypothetical apocalypse.

 
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