He claims to be ‘like, a very smart person, a stable genius’. Like everything else he says, it’s a lie.

President Trump’s self-assessment has been consistent.
“I’m, like, a very smart person,” he assured voters in 2016.
“A very stable genius,” he ruled two years later.
“I’m not a doctor,” he allowed on Thursday, pointing to his skull inside the White House briefing room, “but I’m, like, a person that has a good you-know-what.”
But, Rex Tillerson, former Sec of State, and others in his administration, have referred to him as a ‘moron’, for obvious reasons.
Mr. Trump’s performance that evening, when he suggested that injections of disinfectants into the human body could help combat the coronavirus, did not sound like the work of a doctor, a genius, or a person with a good you-know-what.
No modern American politician can match Mr. Trump’s record of false or illogical statements, which has invited questions about his intelligence. Insinuations and gaffes have trailed former President George W. Bush, former Vice President Dan Quayle and Joseph R. Biden Jr., now the presumptive Democratic nominee, among many others, but Trump is in a league of his own, combining a vain, arrogant personality, no qualms about lying and questionable intelligence.
Not the mix we need for president of the United States.

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