President Trump hasn’t come across the mocked-up video of him on a murderous rampage against journalists and political opponents?

How absurd.

The president’s press secretary, Stephanie Grisham, said Monday morning that her boss hadn’t seen the video widely circulated since Sunday but that “based upon everything he has heard, he strongly condemns this video.”

What a relief, right?

It’s good to know the president at some point intends to censure the horrific video depicting him inside a church shooting journalists and political rivals like the late Sen. John McCain, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Sen. Mitt Romney.

But first he had more important things to tweet Monday morning, like urging Americans to vote for his former press aide Sean Spicer on “Dancing with the Stars.”

It increasingly feels futile to call on Trump, his core supporters and the conservatives who otherwise carry the Republican Party’s moral torch to denounce evil.

They’re simply tone-deaf, too worried about protecting their own fortunes, their elected gigs or too consumed helping Trump isolating this country from the rest of the world to burden themselves with a video that could incite violence against fellow Americans.

You need 'moral clarity' to see the evil in this

But this is no joke, and the rest of America should collectively denounce the grotesque video, which was reportedly produced in 2018 but shown last week at a Trump meeting at his Miami resort.

The video, reported by The New York Times over the weekend, shows a Trump-like figure inside a church striking McCain and journalists at a time when mass shootings in America are too real, too raw to stomach.

“Thinking this video somehow will incite violence against media brands is no different than thinking Joker will lead to mass shootings or heavy metal music leads to satanic suicides or video games create mass shooters. It’s a meme, and it’s free speech,’’ said commentator Stephen Miller on Twitter.

McCain’s daughter, Meghan McCain, shot back saying on Twitter: “This video is disgusting and disturbing and any human with any moral clarity sees that.”

That’s the thing, though. A human needs to have “moral clarity” to see the evil of depicting the nation’s commander-in-chief executing a mass shooting against fellow Americans.

Elvia Díaz is an editorial columnist for The Republic and azcentral, where this column originally appeared. Follow her on Twitter, @elviadiaz1.