On Monday, Donald Trump unveiled his budget proposal for 2021, a submission that is less an order than it is a window into the president’s fantasies, given that it must be approved by Congress, which has historically rejected the White House’s budgets. Still, it’s a great opportunity for Americans, particularly those who may run against the president for office this fall, to see what sort of cuts he would put in place if there were nothing to stop him from acting on his basest instincts. And if you guessed that when left entirely to his own devices, the president would gut spending for the most vulnerable members of the nation, you guessed right!

The Washington Post reports that Trump has proposed a $4.8 trillion budget that would take a hacksaw to the social safety net and vital domestic programs while requesting $2 billion in homeland security spending for his border wall and a 12% budget increase for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration because he wants to go to Mars. Among the programs taking the biggest hit are Medicaid and the Children’s Health Insurance Program, which would lose billions, and food stamp funding, which would be reduced by $181 billion over a decade. (Trump has long made it clear that he believes the poor have gotten way too greedy about eating.) According to the Post, despite Trump claiming that Medicare is safe, the proposal would “also wring savings from Medicare,” so there’s that. The Education Department would see a cut of 8%, the Interior Department would lose 13.4%, and the State Department—that pesky little thing—would be cut by 22%.

In addition, the Environmental Protection Agency—which under Trump has proposed measures expected to kill up to 1,400 Americans per year—would see its budget slashed by 26.5% over the next year alone, while the budget for the Health and Human Services Department would be lopped off by 9%. Crucially, HHS includes the National Institutes of Health and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the latter of which we’re hoping will help prevent the spread of the coronavirus, which has killed at least 910 people, a stat the World Health Organization has warned may just be the “tip of the iceberg.” (Officials have claimed that funding aimed at combating the virus would be protected, but Trump has said a lot of things in the past that turned out to be lies.) Oh, and if you were wondering if these cuts would help the president make good on his bold claims of reducing the deficit, it turns out that no, they’re mostly just for cruelty’s sake.