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> has no options beyond a) try to seem sincerely humbled and intent on improving, or b) do literally anything else

You know, a year ago I would have nodded along to your reply. But after seeing Trump choose B every time and repeatedly get away with it, I have to give Travis at least a modicum of credit for not going full Trump on this one. Not a lot of credit, but the decision was his.



Yes, thank you, that is what I have been trying to say.

Travis removed himself from Trump's team and admitted his faults here. These are two signs he seeks internal change, in my opinion.


Speaking of Trump, Jon Stewart pointed out something interesting recently - it's clear he's always lying, because no-one says 'believe me' when they're not lying. And Trump says it all the time.

"I didn't take the last cookie... believe me"


it's clear he's always lying, because no-one says 'believe me' when they're not lying.

Is that an general thing in English-speaking countries or just American?

Where I grew up I think it would be perfectly fine to say this even when I have been speaking the truth all the way.

(Don't want to defend Trump. I don't like him. Just curious about the idiom or whatever this is.)


I'm Australian, and after hearing Stewart say that, I thought back on my own experiences. The only time I can recall it being used in a somewhat truthful manner is in an angry parental warning "Believe me, you're going to suffer if you continue that way" - some sort of threat that the person in question can carry out. Every other time, it's been bluster with no substance.

I mean seriously, if you throw out the question "Okay, who dropped the production database?" and one of the staff said "It wasn't me. Believe me!", that's kind of instant suspicion right there. It's a really weird thing to say in the contexts that Trump says it in.


Good examples of the difference between "you'd better believe me" and "I hope you believe me". The latter case is of course more common.


https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Matthew+5%3A37&...

"Let what you say be simply ‘Yes’ or ‘No’; anything more than this comes from evil."




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