The evilest person who committed the most horrendous deeds, propagated the worst ideas, or was responsible for other moustache-twirling affairs.
Anyone who is currently alive does not count.
Genghis Khan is up there. His conquests killed millions, I see estimates of up to 40 million, a significant percentage of the world’s population (possibly double-digits). It’s even theorized that so many people died that global temperature dropped as a result. You could go and argue that a large unified empire would prevent many future wars and thus could be a net positive even if establishing it is very bloody (see Pax Romana), and Genghis’ rule was reportedly relatively progressive compared to his contemporaries. But then, you need to make it so that the emprie doesn’t immediately break apart after its ruler dies, which he failed at.
Though you can always argue that he wasn’t really more evil than other rulers, just more successful. Which still makes him a “great villain”, but there are more directly evil deeds than conquest, such as genocide.
He did also have a good side sort of. He also did some good, there are people who only did pure evil.
I hear Hitler treated his dog very well.
IMO, people generally aren’t pure good or evil. But that doesn’t mean that people like Hitler or Genghis Khan aren’t giant assholes.
It’s even theorized that so many people died that global temperature dropped as a result.
I think you and I just solved the climate crisis! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s_4J4uor3JE
Genghis Khan was the original Thanos!?! 🤯
Also, let’s not put too fine a point on it, his famed virility - leading to potentially millions of people with traces of his DNA - was likely expressed (for the most part) through decades of rape in unheard of numbers.
bingo. the Mongol Empire lasted less than 90 years. A flash in the pan in terms of world history. Yeah he was great at conquering a massive amount of land mass but they sure as fuck were unable to hold it. and the 4 Khans after Genghis ruled for like a handful of years each. One of which only lasted a couple years.
Yeah I’m inclined to agree with this if we define “evil” by destructive power at least (and always worth remembering that we merely have general agreements on what “evil” is, usually based on what is and isn’t considered advantageous for human well-being. Absolute good and evil are religious myths.). But GK was also kinda interesting in that his conquests etc. were “honest”. He wasn’t trying to build some ideal society, he just lived in accordance to “Might Makes Right” and surprisingly indiscriminately applied that into his domain as well. Whatever one could claim for themselves, was theirs so long as they could defend it. Regardless of gender, religion, further cultural details etc.
I feel like he represents the logical conclusion of non-conservative right-wing ideals taken to the extreme. Individual power (however that manifests - raw strength, charisma) trumps everything else, so in a way, libertarian… but everything was of course to be absolutely subject to the Mongol Empire rule so, authoritarian.
If we go by ideology + destructiveness as a metric of “evil”, probably Hitler.
I call him, “Rapey McRapenstein”.
Trump and Netanyahu
At this point, putin.
Paul the Apostle or Abraham.
Ego.
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Bruh, how are you going to criticize others for the way they’re answering the question, and yet respond with this? 😂
Billionaires.
God, and probably even dont exists, that makes it more impresive.
Idk if Powell is alive. Ayn Rand, but she is just a fool with a strange philosophy, she can’t be responsible for what the morons did with it.
Idk if whoever founded Mossad is still alive, but they sure sabotaged and sent backwards the entire world.
Whoever took advantage of Jesus delusions, and convinced him he is the messiah, leading to a religion that would be used to stop people from taking on science.
It’s not Jesus that caused people to not listen to science. Humans are just naturally superstitious. Religion has existed in every human civilisation since the beginning of history. Even if Christianity never arose, humans would just be following some other religions.
There will always be a story we tell about anything, whether its accurate or not. In my opinion, both science and religion are a form of storytelling.
I don’t think it’s fair to make Jesus responsible for the modern pick-and-chose followers of his religion, and I doubt modern Christianity would even be recognizable to him - the late Roman state religion is pretty different from his “reformed Judaism”. Plus IIRC early Christendom had some doomsday cult elements.
Couldn’t the same be said of Marx?
Look at the great leap forward, that killed millions of people due to idiotic central planning.
That’s what happens when you take ideology and philosophy over reason.
Mao was not so great.
While Hitler, Pol Pot, Beria, and Kissing er are all obvious and good contenders, I think these will be surpassed by someone who is alive right now.
But who? Well, it’s most likely someone who already has significant resources at their disposal. I for one am convinced we haven’t seen the final form of Peter Thiel.
Trump (yes, hoping he’s dead)
Josef Mengele, Himmler and Hitler. Some of the heinous trio of history for doing numerous unspeakable acts of their time.
Chairman Mao Zedong.
DuPont de Nemours, Inc. or the DuPont Family rather. These guys are a huge contributing factor as to why humans could unknowingly wind up having cancers and other health-related issues directly affected by chemicals that the company has designed. They’ve had their hands in many things including wars, like napalm during Vietnam. They’ve made forever chemicals and have pumped that shit irresponsibly into hundreds of things we use everyday.
I don’t think it comes down to sheer numbers; I think it’s about deliberately causing suffering and reveling in it. So, maybe the BTK killer or another serial killer who liked to torture their victims.
Btk was mentally unwell.
Cain singlehandedly killed 25% of world’s human population.
And fucked his mother.
Shirō Ishii
What did they do?
Surgeon General Shirō Ishii (Japanese: 石井 四郎, Hepburn: Ishii Shirō; [iɕiː ɕiɾoː]; 25 June 1892 – 9 October 1959) was a Japanese biological weapons specialist, microbiologist and army medical officer who served as the director of Unit 731, the largest biological warfare and chemical warfare unit of the Imperial Japanese Army.
Ishii led the development and application of biological weapons at Unit 731 in the puppet state of Manchukuo during the Second Sino-Japanese War from 1937 to 1945. This included the Battle of Changde, the Kaimingjie germ weapon attack, and the planned Operation Cherry Blossoms at Night biological attack against the United States, which intended to spread a weaponized bubonic plague. Ishii and his colleagues also engaged in human experimentation, resulting in the deaths of thousands of subjects, most of them civilians or prisoners of war.
Ishii was later granted immunity in the International Military Tribunal for the Far East by the United States government in exchange for information and research for the U.S. biological warfare program.
Ah yeah, that’s a pretty good contender.












