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  1. www.youtube.com › @TrustMeBroOfficial › videosTrust Me Bro - YouTube

    Almost entertaining & semi-informative videos! 60% of the time I know what I'm talking about, every time, trust me bro. For business and sponsorship inquiries please contact:...

  2. Oct 20, 2021 · “Trust me bro” is stated to put the consumer or crypto trader at ease, these words should ring as a warning to flee the investment or do further research.

    • I Made It Up
    • Dude Trust Me
    • It Was Revealed to Me in A Dream
    • Refuses to Elaborate Further
    • Spreading Misinformation

    On August 11th, 2012, Redditor 350125 posted an image macro about atheism with a fabricated quote falsely ascribed to Bryan Cranston to /r/atheism subreddit. In the thread, Redditor globachill inquired about the source of the quote, with 350125 replying,"None, I made it up myself" (image and exchange shown below, left and right).

    On March 19th, 2015, Tumblruser a6 posted a screenshot of a Yahoo Answers response in which the replying person wrote "Dude trust me" as their source. The post received over 823,900 likes and reblogs in seven years (shown below).

    On February 14th, 2017, Twitter user @JonathanMurden tweeted a screenshot of a footnote from the 1949 book The Divine and the Humanby Nikolai Berdyaev, which read, "1. This was once revealed to me in a dream." (tweet no longer available; shown below).

    Refuses to Elaborate Further is a copypasta that describes a person barging into a discussion, making a statement and leaving without elaborating further. Usually paired with an image of GigaChad 2, the copypasta gained popularity in memesin March 2021.

    Spreading Misinformation refers to an activity of spreading lies and falsehoods, primarily on social media, which can pursue purposes ranging from simply drawing fun from misinforming and trollingpeople to achieving some malicious goals. Starting in 2021, memes describing the practice of spreading misinformation as joyful mischief gained popularity...

  3. It means they don’t have a legit source and are asking you to ~just trust them~, usually after ridiculous false statements. Example: The earth is flat! Source: trust me bro

  4. Twitter ran with it until it became “trust me bro” and then the internet just kinda took it from there haha

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  6. Tl;dr: All this to say, here's a framework for approaching any "trust me bro post": (1) Assess what claims are being made. (2) Assess the source of each claim. (3) Assess the veracity of each claim and credibility of each source. (4) Determine whether any of the claims made can be quantified through further research.

  7. Find the GIFs, Clips, and Stickers that make your conversations more positive, more expressive, and more you.

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