My #ScottAdams Story

In the 1990s, I worked as an office temp. I logged a lot of hours in a lot of different offices, and I had an instant and accurate way to sense how dysfunctional and toxic a workplace was as soon as I walked in.

I took note of how many #Dilbert comics were pinned up, and where.

If I saw one or two #Dilbert comics scattered around, I knew people had their gripes and complaints about their co-workers, but it was nothing too serious.

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If virtually every cubicle had more than one #Dilbert comic pinned up, I knew everyone working there disliked each other. The atmosphere probably wasn’t going to be too terrible for me as a temp, but I wouldn’t want to work there permanently.

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Whenever I saw a disproportionate number of #Dilbert comics in one cubicle, I knew to avoid that person. They were clearly the asshole in the office, and they were usually on a hair trigger. I once saw a cubicle that was practically wallpapered with Dilbert comics, including several where he had labeled the characters with co-workers’ names, and then pinned them on the OUTSIDE of his cube. Yikes! Steer clear of that dude!

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If there was even one #Dilbert comic pinned up to a communal bulletin board, watch out! The hatred went from workers up AND management down.

God forbid someone had used the photocopier to enlarge it; that meant they wanted everyone to see how much they hated everyone.

In this last situation, I would usually call my agency at the end of the day and ask if they had any other assignments.

If I saw Dilbert plush toys, I’d just tell my agency I couldn’t continue the assignment.

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The #Dilbert gauge never failed me. The more Dilbert comic strips I saw, the nastier the place was.

I worked at a one place where Dilbert was banned. Specifically, just Dilbert. Sounds extreme, but the bosses knew exactly what #ScottAdams was peddling, and they didn’t want any.

That office ran smoothly and was among the nicest.

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So #Dilbert was my canary in the coal mine. I can’t think of another comic strip that functioned like this. Cathy was drawn almost exactly as badly as Dilbert, but the only thing I learned from seeing that strip in an office was the person pinning it up had body image issues. Peanuts meant the person had self-esteem problems. (Or, contrarywise, they identified with Snoopy.)

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So I guess the moral here is: #ScottAdams was a thin-skinned, egotistical monster who wrote and badly drew a hateful comic strip called #Dilbert, and all his “humor” punched down, and he used sock puppet accounts to brag about his own genius, and was a racist, and he thought Donald Trump was great...

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...but for all that, if I were forced – I donno, at gunpoint, maybe -- to utter one nice word about #ScottAdams, I guess I’d say that for a few years, he was...

USEFUL.

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Further reading: “The trouble with #Dilbert : how corporate culture gets the last laugh”
by Norman Solomon
https://archive.org/details/troublewithdilbe00solo_0/mode/2up

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The trouble with Dilbert : how corporate culture gets the last laugh : Solomon, Norman, 1951- : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive

Internet Archive

@ridetheory

I remember reading Dilbert when I was at Uni in the late 1990's.

After I did one internship, I realised how true-to-life some of his observations were, and decided that corporate life was not for me. :D

I stopped reading Adams after he outed himself, but this Chrimbo, my partner gave me a Dilbert calendar, as it had been recommended by Amazon as a gift for me.

The latest cartoons were even worse than I had realised.

Just right-wing talking points raised as humour... :|

@ridetheory

I saw the same thing happen with Dave Sim when he was writing Cerebus.

Another interesting creative author, who turned to misogyny and hate. :(

@BillySmith @ridetheory Kind of like when Frank Miller had a rant against the Occupy Wall Street movement (remember that?) and I went back to Batman: the Dark Knight Returns and saw the right-wing jabs at «leftist» stereotypes I had glossed over the first times I read it. The stoner parents, the do-gooder psychiatrist, and so on.
@toriver @BillySmith @ridetheory
I... seem to have not heard any of this and am now needing to reread Dark Knight Returns...
@toriver @BillySmith @ridetheory not defending the author - but that might be the truest depiction of Batman, if you lean into Bruce Wayne is upholding justice for his own social class

@toriver @BillySmith @ridetheory

Yeah. Miller was always a right-wing Freak.
Like, capital-F Freak.
He had a good comic, early on (Ronin), but he let his own self through more and more, and it was toxic.