On the “Scott Adams is a racist” controversy
An interesting take from Stephen Green, probably the best one I’ve seen so far:
By his own admission, Adams was using “hyperbole” to make his point. There are just two problems with that. The first is that his targets weren’t clear. Was he going after Rasmussen for releasing a “poll” with only 160 respondents? Was he mocking white flight? Was he satirizing the notion that blacks can’t be racist? The whole thing was just too scattershot to be effective. The second problem is that if Adams was trying to be funny, he wasn’t nearly arch enough for the humor to come through.
Ronald Reagan believed that if you’re explaining, you’re losing. The same is true for jokes: If you have to explain them, they aren’t funny. Adams got himself in a situation where he had to explain, explain, explain…
Why did Adams put out a video that he must have known would get “Dilbert” globally canceled? I get the feeling that might have been his goal all along, to get Dilbert pulled from newspapers that despise its creator. Adams is taking his comic strip private, available soon to subscribers only on his Locals page.
Makes sense to me.
That’s my take as well. He had to know full well what would happen. He was just being far too reductive and absurd.
As an aside, I wasn’t aware of that the Rasmussen poll only had 160 respondents. Until now I was only sort of half paying attention to the story and hadn’t dug deeper. And as we all know, these days you have to go out of your way to research every aspect of a story like this if you want to come to any sort of reasonable conclusion. But anyway… 160 is far, far too small a sample to conclude anything really.
Adams is neither conservative nor in any way “racist” (a term which, through brazen and hysterical overuse and abuse, has lost any real meaning), and he really does believe in judging his fellow citizens as individuals. It is likely that he was simply weary of the completely one-sided (leftist and black-nationalist) “conversation on race”, perhaps interested in “stirring the pot”, and certainly angry that the facts about this country’s interracial crime (almost entirely black-on-white or black-on-Asian) are never discussed truthfully in our mendacious and malevolent media, intent on fomenting racial division.
j e:
I like that formulation: “our mendacious and malevolent media”. We have long been using Rush Limbaugh’s “Main Stream Media” (MSM). Perhaps it’s time to replace that with “MMM”.
He changed to state road media toward the end
Dilbert was often about stupid or arrogant white people
Here in Abq “Dilbert” gets top billing in the Sunday paper. If a hundred or so papers cancel “Dilbert” that’s sizeable loss of income and influence. As I recall, it’s also jeopardized publishing a new “Dilbert” book.
I hope Adams has a plan. He is been playing it close to the edge and the left has been gunning for him. He may have been a bit too clever this time.
Of course, being canceled isn’t right. But there are times when it’s really not advisable to wear a short dress, even if that’s not how it should be.
Next thing you know a firearm will get involved.
I never thought the Dilbert thing was worth reading.
huxley said, “But there are times when it’s really not advisable to wear a short dress, even if that’s not how it should be.”
Sam Brinton should be advised not to wear long dresses (sorry, couldn’t resist).
The deal Adam’s has on distribution is probably less money than his locals at $5 a subscriber. And newspapers have been dying.
The issue is rights to dilbert and to distribution, and who owns them.
Most book authors get screwed by publishing houses, and make a lot more money going independent. With kindle it bypasses the need for a publisher and a minimum print run.
Scott Adams thinks of himself as a master of persuasion, and was drawn to Trump in 2015 over Trump’s persuasion skills and methods. His books and frequent postings are often interesting, if rather self-possessed. Since Covid and the breakup of his marriage, he has been more adventurous in his meanderings, but has built a bit of a cocoon world where he can be provocative and yet vague at the same time.
This rant I assume he knew would result in his cancellation, and he undoubtedly has several moves planned beyond this point. Not so sure that it has and will turn out as he has anticipated. Personal isolation, online and podcasting complacency, and too much cannabis could be clouding his judgment. He won’t starve, and probably needs new challenges anyway.
Very little critique of the motives/actions of the newspapers wrt Adams, as compared to the “meh” response to the bombardment of ant-white statements that gush from the mouths and keyboards of certain politicians, journalists (for lack of a better word), academics, and purported entertainers. Not to mention the “President in name” of the United States who tried, in vain, to separate himself from all of the “stupid white boys”. I can’t say that I am surprised.
I have loved Dilbert for years; but I have not particularly cared for Adams himself; what little I knew about him. Still, I abhor this latest manifestation of the highly discriminatory cancel culture.
Guess I have been out of the loop, but until this episode broke, I did not realize that the rather benign assertion “it is ok to be white” was an indicator of White Supremacy.
Associated thought: I wonder if there could be a market for SWB (stupid white boy) tee shirts and ball caps?
Green is incorrect on a material fact. The poll was of 1000 Black Americans, not 160 respondents. I have no idea where he pulled that number from.
Adams had blown his credibility with many on the vaccination fiasco, & his dodgy admission that he was wrong but logically right…or somesuch.
This racial rant was an effort to claw back his 15 minutes. Streisand effect?
Who knows…and I’m not sure I have any damns to give.
It is sad but true that if you are of a non-protected class (whites, males, Evangelicals, straights) your employment and life can be destroyed by the subjective feelings of someone from a protected class. As decent human beings, we’re called upon to grant each person their basic humanity. But sometimes the probabilities are just too dangerous. (The NY Times once, without an once of self-awareness, referred to the tension that results when a person’s personal perception of truth and the facts are at odds.)
I find it interesting that I never hear of Orthodox Jews being caught in a publicity tornado for defending traditional marriage or finding homosexuality an unacceptable lifestyle.
Adams remarks fit in the tradition of John Derbyshire and Charles Murray.
Have any of you actually listened to the hour long podcasts by Scott Adams, which are posted on Youtube AND FULLY MONITIZED (i.e., Youtube sees no problem with what Scott is saying).
Listen to Scott to get the full context. He knew that he would have a wave of cancellations, but has grasped the nettle and is pulling mightily at this weed that is destroying the comity of our nation.
Devote the time to see what he is doing by listening to him.
Learn something by listening to the last 5 podcasts— Scott has major skills that he is now employing to get the nation to work on real solutions to the problem that we all see but are fearful of stating out loud. Do not let others assign your opinion. I also suggest you listen to Hotep Jesus podcast with Scott.
P,S, The mendacious and malevolent media are now calling him a “Holocaust Denier” simply because in one conversation he opined that is was difficult to know the number of Jews murdered by the Nazis (the number is updated again and again over time).
jvermeer:
I have no idea what you’re talking about when you write, “I find it interesting that I never hear of Orthodox Jews being caught in a publicity tornado for defending traditional marriage or finding homosexuality an unacceptable lifestyle.” Nor do I know what a “publicity tornado” is, versus getting bad publicity. Perhaps you’re unaware of all the negative things said about Orthodox Jews, including in the Netflix series “Unorthodox”? Or all the NY Times coverage indicating that Orthodox Jews spread COVID and don’t care? Or are anti-vaxxers? (Neither is the case.) Or are misogynistic? Or have too many children? Or are homophobes?
Have any of you actually listened to the hour long podcasts by Scott Adams…
Edward:
I have and I liked them, but an hour is an hour, and five hours is even longer. I’d rather read a summary.
(Besides I have French to learn! Maybe if Adams did his podcasts in French.)
Here’s a link to his podcasts for those interested:
https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xMjhkMDcyYy9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw
@ LeClerc > “Adams remarks fit in the tradition of John Derbyshire and Charles Murray.”
Well, since you mentioned Derb —
He also speculates that Adams may have been trying a humorous line, but muffed it because, well, the Left has no sense of humor.
https://www.unz.com/jderbyshire/get-the-hell-away-from-black-people-what-i-think-about-scott-adams-version-of-the-talk/
He gives a considerably longer excerpt from The Podcast Heard Round the Internet than most pundits have done, and makes a point about interpretation being in the mind of the beholder.
LordAzrael on February 28, 2023 at 9:14 pm said:
“Green is incorrect on a material fact. The poll was of 1000 Black Americans, not 160 respondents. I have no idea where he pulled that number from.”
Actually, not exactly.
Here’s the Rasmussen Tweet (Derbyshire linked it).
https://twitter.com/Rasmussen_Poll/status/1629246887718014976/photo/1
There were 1000 respondents total.
Blacks constituted 13%.
Maybe Green meant 160 Black respondents, but he’s still off on the math.
It is a very small sample, however.
Neo didn’t cite this final part of Green’s post — I think it confirms that Adams did indeed have a plan and wasn’t blind-sided by being cancelled because that was his objective.
I would suggest that he went with the obverse of the cliché “you can’t fire me, I quit” — in order to avoid the legal consequences of pulling the strips and merch himself, which would undoubtedly break some contracts, he has persuaded the people he wanted to stop doing business with to fire him.
“Don’t throw me in that briar patch, Brer Fox!”
(quoting another cancelled icon)
He might even have grounds to sue them!
I thought this was a particularly good analysis of the poll itself, where Beaton makes a couple of points about the stats themselves being of the glass-half-full or glass-half-empty mode. He then throws some rocks at Rasmussen for asking ambiguous questions — which all of the pollsters do when the goal is clicks instead of useful information.
(h/t Powerline)
https://theaspenbeat.com/2023/02/28/dilbert-is-dead-killed-by-his-creator/
Jeff Charles (who is black) also addressed the poll numbers directly, and adds some serious observations.
https://redstate.com/jeffc/2023/02/27/who-says-its-not-okay-to-be-white-n709411
I suspect that Adams has decided to—boldly, courageously—climb up on the ramparts and point out—shout out—just how ABSURD the Progressive-instigated racial hysteria has become, this in an effort to enable people to first recognize the absurdity, and then, one hopes, “educate” (shame?) them into concluding that it is absolutely necessary for the sake of EVERYONE to reassess this suicidal hysteria.
In doing this, Adams may be emulating the model of Elon Musk’s heroism—perhaps—but he must certainly know that he has placed himself in a very vulnerable position. Perhaps he believes that his “humorist” background may shield him, but if so he is mistaken (look at what happened to Dave Chappelle); and he will have to show quite a bit of backbone, which I have no doubt he will do.
Nonetheless, in vociferously pointing out the ABSURDIT of the Left, he seems to have forgotten that the Left, swimming in a SEA OF ABSURDITY, will not recognize it; moreover, the hysteria that the Left—especially its media—provokes serves to block out ANY sense of understanding, of self-recognition, of even LOOKING and/or SEEING what is truly going on.
OTOH, if the Left will not see it, maybe others less devoted to hysteria and mindless blindness will.
Still, he may well end up only preaching to the choir, as it were.
Good luck to him (he’ll be needing it).
And to us….
– – – – – – – – – – – –
+ Bonus:
Sharing some “Good News”….
Manchin continues to step up—
https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/dem-sen-manchin-joins-republican-efforts-thwart-esg-investing-federal-funds
Another GOP win—
https://justthenews.com/government/congress/gop-withstands-democrat-attempts-protect-government-censorship-power-house-bill
The truth about “Biden” ‘s “Student Forgiveness Scam”—
https://justthenews.com/government/courts-law/tax-expert-says-biden-student-loan-forgiveness-plan-was-just-bribe-get-votes
https://reason.com/volokh/2023/02/28/thoughts-on-todays-supreme-court-student-loan-forgiveness-oral-arguments/
Footloose Lori Lightfoot Loses—
https://justthenews.com/politics-policy/paul-vallas-projected-make-chicago-mayor-runoff-lightfoot-trails-bid-keep-office
And this on Musk’s talents for survival in the “inhospitable” environment of the “Biden” shark tank—
https://donsurber.substack.com/p/how-musk-survives
South Africa–
If you want to see what comprehensive societal collapse looks like, take a look at this compilation of evidence at
https://twitter.com/k9_reaper/status/1630436052723720193
Snow on Pine wrote: South Africa–
“If you want to see what comprehensive societal collapse looks like, take a look at this compilation of evidence at …”
For someone who once lived in South Africa, loved it, and seriously considered retiring there, this is shocking. My friends there have verified to me that everything in this thread is accurate, and it saddens me. What the “colonizers” built on the southern tip of Africa had to be seen to be believed, and I was fortunate to experience it before the collapse. The slow decay was visible even then, but the country still worked and its beauty and wonderful quality of life still evident. All of my South African friends are encouraging their children and grandchildren to emigrate, to leave their homes and leave behind parents and grandparents because they’ve given up the hope that the collapse can be reversed, and that it heartbreaking.
All of my South African friends are encouraging their children and grandchildren to emigrate, to leave their homes and leave behind parents and grandparents because they’ve given up the hope that the collapse can be reversed, and that it heartbreaking.
Mugabe begged Lord Soames, who was the last British governor, to stay when the British left and Rhodesia became Zimbabwe. Mugabe knew he could not rule that country successfully. When Lord Soames died, Mugabe, even though he was banned from Britain, snuck into the country to attend his funeral. That, of course, was a different time.
I love that Reagan quote. If John Wayne said it, it would go like this:”Never explain, Mister! It’s a sign of weakness.”
I had the same sense that Scott Adams was spiking syndication for some reason.
I wouldn’t express myself as Adams did, only because I won’t extend a uniform treatment to any class of people on the basis of what 53% of them exhibit in a poll. That’s the error of racism, in my book: the failure to treat people as individuals on the basis of their actual characteristics rather than the characteristics I insist on attributing to them. By this standard, there is of course anti-white racism just as there is anti-everything-else racism.
I realize the fad now is to confine racism to situations involving a historical imbalance of power, and naturally there is a special concern about racism in that context. Nevertheless, the overall human misery from the error of rigidly projecting unreal characteristics onto living, breathing humans is so much more important to me that my number priority is to avoid it, power imbalances or no.
I absolutely reserve the right to refuse to have much to do with anyone–of any color or professed socio-political beliefs–who self-identifies as incapable of learning this lesson.