NotHardUp1
What? Me? Really?
I've worked in manufacturing and aerospace since 1986. For almost the entirety of that time, I have posted Dilberts, shared them, emailed them, and celebrated their take on the insipid folly of management, large corporations, incompetent workers, malicious compliance, and the inane realities of everyday work.
Sadly, I no longer feel any joy in the series or want to read it.
Contrary to believing in cancel culture or protesting the author's racist outburst, I just don't want to personally affiliate with any message of segregation or hate. It is one thing to address subcultures within America and the patterns of poverty, crime, prejudice, bigotry, or any social ills therein, but it's really quite another to ever espouse to avoid any members of society based on race. For example, I have no malice for any grocer who abandons a ghetto because its losses are ridiculous to pilfering, theft, or even robbery, aside from any riot threat. That's an economic decision, based on risk, not race.
Before Scott Adams blew up, I had found him on YouTube last year and tried to watch him, but immediately stopped when he bragged about silencing those who left comments on his podcasts that were not in agreement. Dissent is not a basis for censorship. Once I saw that, I lost a lot of respect for the man.
I felt similarly when, decades ago, Whoopi Goldberg satirized our national anthem as a comedy routine, inserting obscenities in it throughout. I'm not blindling patriotic, but I found it objectionable. It doesn't mean I do not listen to Goldberg's political opinions on The View, but I don't follow her acting, as I don't like the degradation of the values the flag embodies, period.
As much as art is separate from the artist who creates it, at some point, I do think all of us walk away. If an artist goes out of his or her way to become identified with political causes that dominate the medium, then the art can and does fall behind the politics.
I have no way of knowing if Adams has always harbored his animus, or if it's something that has evolved, as many men do become more reactionary with age, but in the end, I don't care. He is what he is now, and I'm not a fan.
www.economist.com
www.forbes.com
Sadly, I no longer feel any joy in the series or want to read it.
Contrary to believing in cancel culture or protesting the author's racist outburst, I just don't want to personally affiliate with any message of segregation or hate. It is one thing to address subcultures within America and the patterns of poverty, crime, prejudice, bigotry, or any social ills therein, but it's really quite another to ever espouse to avoid any members of society based on race. For example, I have no malice for any grocer who abandons a ghetto because its losses are ridiculous to pilfering, theft, or even robbery, aside from any riot threat. That's an economic decision, based on risk, not race.
Before Scott Adams blew up, I had found him on YouTube last year and tried to watch him, but immediately stopped when he bragged about silencing those who left comments on his podcasts that were not in agreement. Dissent is not a basis for censorship. Once I saw that, I lost a lot of respect for the man.
I felt similarly when, decades ago, Whoopi Goldberg satirized our national anthem as a comedy routine, inserting obscenities in it throughout. I'm not blindling patriotic, but I found it objectionable. It doesn't mean I do not listen to Goldberg's political opinions on The View, but I don't follow her acting, as I don't like the degradation of the values the flag embodies, period.
As much as art is separate from the artist who creates it, at some point, I do think all of us walk away. If an artist goes out of his or her way to become identified with political causes that dominate the medium, then the art can and does fall behind the politics.
I have no way of knowing if Adams has always harbored his animus, or if it's something that has evolved, as many men do become more reactionary with age, but in the end, I don't care. He is what he is now, and I'm not a fan.
Scott Adams’s racist comments were spurred by a badly worded poll
The firm has turned to polling the right-wing culture war for clicks
Scott Adams’ Undoing: A Time Line Of The ‘Dilbert’ Cartoonist’s Fall From Grace
Adams faces social and monetary consequences after making racist comments online.
www.forbes.com
Elon Musk defends racist tirade by Dilbert creator Scott Adams
Twitter's CEO accused US media of racism after multiple newspapers dropped the popular cartoon.
www.bbc.com

