I'm not taking a stand either way with my previous post. I don't mean to sound overly academic but it's a timeless question which can't be answered without defining the word "bad", and having a consensus what it means. Does it mean people who kill or torture? Lie? Steal? Think bad thoughts? Break the moral code of (any) religious text? Self-promote? Manipulate others? And then there's the context. Is this always? Sometimes? Once? Contextual? Are we born this way? Do we develop this way by the influence of our society, or for survival? Is it a Utilitarian definition?
I'm sorry I know that's wordy and you just want an answer. My gut response is that most people are guilty of some bad behaviours, or some bad thoughts and morals. The extent to which it becomes normalised ("It's OK to drive a little over the speed limit, it's OK to steal when you're starving, it's OK to tell a white lie, it's OK to be atheist), demonstrates that it's normal for people to be "bad" to a certain extent. When these behaviours are predictable and socially-accepted, that means it's human nature. The people are no longer bad, and not outside the norm.
Therefore no, most people aren't bad in my mind even though most people do and think bad things.
_________________
And in the end, the love you take is equal to the love you make.