TetraGenesis
Member
No one "became" anything because of Trump. He just showed them that they no longer have to hide who they truly are.
PREACH.
No one "became" anything because of Trump. He just showed them that they no longer have to hide who they truly are.
This is also Garfield levels of unfunny and a good example of how money and philosophy can insulate otherwise intelligent people from reality and consequence.
I'm guessing he's a libertarian now? Or maybe always?
Scott Adams is still alive. His clever plan sure paid off!According to his blog he supported Trump but was going to vote Clinton because he lives in California and didn't want to get lynched and/or lose business. Then he decided not to vote for Clinton because she supported estate taxes, which he considers a crime against the rich, so he voted for Johnson instead (while still actually supporting Trump but not voting for him out of fear for his life)
Yes really
Hold on, isn't that strip's joke - linked on the last page - that the environmental science is rigidly tested from basic fundamentals, but the economics - what the expert has actually been hired to talk to the company about - are not?
I'm not sure if that's a funny comic but I don't think it's actually denying climate change.
EDIT: Looking it over again, I think that it's such a badly written comic that it's completely unclear what it's point is.
His blog posts have made it very clear that he doesn't trust climate science
It's still better than the related Dilbert tv show is all I can say about it now.
Hold up, the UPN Dilbert show was great
Hold on, isn't that strip's joke - linked on the last page - that the environmental science is rigidly tested from basic fundamentals, but the economics - what the expert has actually been hired to talk to the company about - are not?
I'm not sure if that's a funny comic but I don't think it's actually denying climate change.
EDIT: Looking it over again, I think that it's such a badly written comic that it's completely unclear what it's point is. The line about "ignore the ones that look wrong to us" either means "we're selecting via confirmation bias" or "we look at the general trend, not outlying models".
Ugh, I have some Dilbert comics in my room that I used to enjoy reading on occasion. There's still some pretty clever humour in there, but ever since his weird Trump turn, I have no desire to read them again.
the fact that anyone reads any newspaper comic in 2017 is funnier than this comic.
Hold up, the UPN Dilbert show was great
I kinda miss those years. Everything felt more... innocent.
I feel so bad for liking Dilbert many years ago. I thought it used to be...smart.
I went and looked at current day VG Cats, my mind wasn't ready
But now the words are too small Sonny.It is like going to your grandparents house and upgrading their TV and entertainment system but they refuse.
The entire structure of his comic was that the highest level employees were the most incompetent in the company. Asok the intern is literally the smartest person in the comic, and the CEO is the most incompetent.
Then he endorses Trump...
I just looked at the last two and I was all, well, not funny, but could have been worse.
And then I looked three back.
scott adams has completely jumped the shark
i sometimes hate read his blog with ad-blocking firmly turned on
*whispers*yokai watch?*whispers*I just looked at the last two and I was all, well, not funny, but could have been worse.
And then I looked three back.
I rationalize it this way: he did say that many (most?) of the jokes in Dilbert were e-mailed to him. True stories from office workplaces.
I feel so bad for liking Dilbert many years ago. I thought it used to be...smart.
More like you go over to their dilapidated house with holes in the roof and bats in the bathroom to do some home repairs but they refuse.It is like going to your grandparents house and upgrading their TV and entertainment system but they refuse.
Honestly, this comic and the sentiments it displays are part of the problem. It plays exactly into climate deniers' view of people who want to fight climate change.
First, it implies that stopping pollution is an intrinsic good, even if there are no real repercussions for it. Part of the climate denier mindset is that liberals believe this and are thus biased against pollution, and as such not trustworthy when studying the effects of it. Compare to illegal immigration: if someone is racist, would you trust them to accurately and fairly cite evidence that illegal immigration is associated with higher crime rates, unemployment among citizens, higher tax burden on social services, etc.?
Now at this point you're probably thinking that, yes, pollution is inherently bad, and that's a fine position to take! And you'd be wrong. Compare to far-left 'anti-toxin' mentality. The people who support 'juice cleanses' or avoiding gluten or that organic/natural food is inherently better than GMO. All about avoiding things they classify as evil without evidence. That's exactly the sort of mindset climate deniers see in you: you think that pollution is inherently evil and worth stopping even if the evidence that it's bad is wrong. If climate change were false, reducing carbon emissions would be a nonsensical thing to do, just like avoiding gluten is nonsensical for most people.
Secondly, the comic dismisses the very real cost of going green. If there's no real reason to avoid burning them, we as a society would be paying a huge price. Yet often this seems to be ignored, or at least downplayed (understandably: sadly politics these days includes a lot of "exaggerate your strengths and ignore your weaknesses," which is an effective way to get votes (see: Trump, master of these things) but disappointingly dishonest, which can drive away people who view themselves as intellectuals, like Scott Adams). Again, compare to illegal immigration: imagine a comic that had various purported consequences of illegal immigration on the slideshow and someone saying "what if those are all nonsense and we secure our borders for nothing?" in support of building The Wall.
Bottom line: the comic says "even if there's no actual downside, we should reduce carbon emissions [and ignore the fact that this is costly]." The right position to take on the matter is: "climate change is real, and fighting it is expensive but worth it."
Honestly, this comic and the sentiments it displays are part of the problem. It plays exactly into climate deniers' view of people who want to fight climate change.
First, it implies that stopping pollution is an intrinsic good, even if there are no real repercussions for it. Part of the climate denier mindset is that liberals believe this and are thus biased against pollution, and as such not trustworthy when studying the effects of it. Compare to illegal immigration: if someone is racist, would you trust them to accurately and fairly cite evidence that illegal immigration is associated with higher crime rates, unemployment among citizens, higher tax burden on social services, etc.?
Now at this point you're probably thinking that, yes, pollution is inherently bad, and that's a fine position to take! And you'd be wrong. Compare to far-left 'anti-toxin' mentality. The people who support 'juice cleanses' or avoiding gluten or that organic/natural food is inherently better than GMO. All about avoiding things they classify as evil without evidence. That's exactly the sort of mindset climate deniers see in you: you think that pollution is inherently evil and worth stopping even if the evidence that it's bad is wrong. If climate change were false, reducing carbon emissions would be a nonsensical thing to do, just like avoiding gluten is nonsensical for most people.
Secondly, the comic dismisses the very real cost of going green. If there's no real reason to avoid burning them, we as a society would be paying a huge price. Yet often this seems to be ignored, or at least downplayed (understandably: sadly politics these days includes a lot of "exaggerate your strengths and ignore your weaknesses," which is an effective way to get votes (see: Trump, master of these things) but disappointingly dishonest, which can drive away people who view themselves as intellectuals, like Scott Adams). Again, compare to illegal immigration: imagine a comic that had various purported consequences of illegal immigration on the slideshow and someone saying "what if those are all nonsense and we secure our borders for nothing?" in support of building The Wall.
Bottom line: the comic says "even if there's no actual downside, we should reduce carbon emissions [and ignore the fact that this is costly]." The right position to take on the matter is: "climate change is real, and fighting it is expensive but worth it."
Since I haven't paid attention to Scott Adams since fucking high school (that would be the 90's, to you younguns), I had no idea he was a batshit crazy trump apologizing misogynist.
Now I gotta burn my two Dilbert books. What a douchebag. That zebra/lion, women/men analogy was horrifying. Especially because there are a lot of people that read that, and nod their head in agreement. Such a disgusting fuckface.
This is neogafNo, you don't have to burn the books. What a moronic overreaction.
I just looked at the last two and I was all, well, not funny, but could have been worse.
And then I looked three back.