How about the simple acknowledgement that every human is inherently flawed? Wouldn't that be more a more respectful approach than resorting to lazy ad hominem attacks on a man who has been leading this country for less than a week?
All humans
are terrible, though the extent varies. I may not believe in god, but I sure as hell believe humans are, by nature, fallen creatures.
I happen to believe Donald Trump is
especially terrible,
particularly fallen, et cetera; I think he's bad, I think his plans are mostly bad, and I think most of his reasons for doing things are bad. I believe, moreover, that I have good reasons to hold to this line of thinking—both with respect to President Trump's well-archived past, his words and actions over the course of his public-office campaign,
and the policy decisions he has floated in his first few days in said office. Likewise, [MENTION=1810]mqt[/MENTION] is correct:
ad hominem modes of attack are not inherently fallacious; if a person's character or past actions are relevant to their current claims, it's a logically-valid basis for argument.
But, as you said up-thread, what "constitutes good character" is not a matter of universal consensus; and I fully concede that you, or anyone else, might conceive dubious or even downright terrible things to be examples of "good". For one instance: I don't conflate pettiness with righteous obduracy. For another: I think that capitalism is, essentially, a morally-bankrupt system of house-ordering. As a final entry: I don't think Donald Trump has ever once peddled a truly worthwhile product on the sordid market—whether you're judging steaks or education or television or real-estate—so you'll excuse me if I clutch my trepidations like so many pearls, and bear little faith regarding the policy promises he's peddling now.