‘A Very Animalistic Human’: ‘Art of the Deal’ Co-Author Calls Tells MSNBC Trump is ‘Feral’ And ‘Clearly Moving Toward Dementia’

 

The co-author of Donald Trump’s famous book Art of the Deal called the former president a “very animalistic human” and “feral” in a recent interview.

Journalist and author Tony Schwartz joined MSNBC anchor Ari Melber for an interview on Friday where the pair discussed recent reports that the GOP nominee has become exhausted on the campaign trail.

Kamala Harris has called out Trump for his older age and reports of exhaustion while refusing to debate her and cancelling interviews.

Schwartz noted during the interview that Harris’ recent attacks on Trump may help take away votes from the former president in the last few weeks of the election.

SCHWARTZ: Well, I think there are very few ways to siphon off votes from either side right now. And I think one of them is he’s exhausted. I mean, remember the Hillary during the Hillary campaign where she at the World Trade Center where she kind of collapsed. And, yeah, they used he used that. And I think-

MELBER: Animal instinct.

SCHWARTZ: Yeah. I mean, he’s a feral guy. Like he’s a very animalistic human being. And so I think that he I think he is I think she is going after the very few things that I think can affect this.

So what are they? So, number one, there is that he is clearly moving toward dementia…What are the symptoms? He can’t put sentences together. He loses track of what he’s saying. He contradicts himself.

And that is combined with the second thing that I think is powerful, which is we’ve always known that he is a man without conscience. He’s a saint. He’s shameless. Meaning he will say anything to anyone. So what you just saw him say was absolutely clearly a lie.

His fear is really high now. And if you combine the evidence of dementia with a psychopathic personality and his age and exhaustion as one of the consequences, this is one toxic brew that I think that I think some voters will be influenced by.

Watch the clip above via MSNBC.

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