Yeah, I'm no psychologist but he sounded off.
It made me sad because I loved his stuff for years.
Obviously falseHe drew pictures nobody cared about
I loved Dilbert... my old boss hated when I put up classic comics to make fun of corporate policies.
Damn... I hated worked for certain huge Construction Company 15 years ago... They bought out my company, ruined it and I left 6 months later
Kiewit
Meetings, meetings and more worthless meetings...
This one really hit him where it hurts
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Trying to bamboozle God could be very counterproductive if he decides to go Old Testament on you, I'd imagine.I knew who he was, but can't say I ever followed him or his cartoon much. I know he said some controversial things previously as well. RIP
I will say it was very interesting that he said he converted to Christianity when he knew he was going to die.. he basically said he didn't believe but thought it was worth it just in case LOL - uhhh.. interesting perspective... Scott, if God were real, don't you think he'd be able to tell?
Trying to bamboozle God could be very counterproductive if he decides to go Old Testament on you, I'd imagine.
But perhaps that was his final bit. Let it marinateJust came across as very arrogant like he could trick god.. I mean I know he was sick and desperate, but at least play the part and don't say the quiet part out loud lol
i’m sure he’ll come back and say man i was incorrect. these media types are awful.
I knew who he was, but can't say I ever followed him or his cartoon much. I know he said some controversial things previously as well. RIP
I will say it was very interesting that he said he converted to Christianity when he knew he was going to die.. he basically said he didn't believe but thought it was worth it just in case LOL - uhhh.. interesting perspective... Scott, if God were real, don't you think he'd be able to tell?
Rip.RIP Scott.... dead at 68. Prostate cancer got him.
Here's what made him great.
- He donated a ton to disaster relief... on many occasions.
- He gave a voice to office workers who felt trapped in bureaucracy, bad management, and corporate nonsense.
- The strip helped normalize criticism of inefficient management and corporate jargon long before it was fashionable.
- He mocked pointless meetings, buzzwords with no substance, promotions based on politics, not competence.
- He advocated for practical thinking over ideology
- He went with what actually worked in a technical, project management, and business setting instead of what should work.
- He resonated with analytical minds, which was rare.
- He consistently encouraged people to question narratives, authority, and consensus views.
- He embraced the core principle of independent thought.
Here's what ruffled feathers
Adams reacted to a Rasmussen Reports poll (conducted February 13-15, 2023) that asked 1,000 American adults whether they agreed or disagreed with the statement: "It's OK to be white".
Adams interpreted this as evidence that "nearly half" of Black Americans were "not OK with white people." He then escalated dramatically: "If nearly half of all Blacks are not OK with white people... that's a hate group. And I don't want anything to do with them."
- Among Black respondents (about 13% of the sample): 53% agreed, 26% disagreed, and 21% were not sure (combining to 47% who did not affirmatively agree).
For an analytical thinker, that was harsh.
When I consider a person, it's a mixed bag, unless it's Jesus Christ or the Virgin Mary (oh yeah... I went there). He did a lot of very good things and clearly had an impact. He's a hero to many engineers, programmers, project managers, business analysts, and those who work with large corporations.
But perhaps that was his final bit. Let it marinate
You said it wasn't real, idiot. It was real. They "amended" the headline only after an uproar.You forgot to add the last line:
The Washington Post finally settled on "Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, extremist leader of Islamic State, dies at 48."
Guess that was an accident. You weren't deliberately trying to mislead a bunch a stupid trumpers, were you? Or did you just not read it yourself?