The developer of the Dilbert comic strip dealtwith a reaction of cancellations Saturday while safeguarding remarks explaining individuals who are Black as members of “a hate group” from which white individuals needto “get away.”
Various media publishers throughout the U.S. knocked the remarks by Dilbert developer Scott Adams as racist, despiteful and prejudiced while stating they would no longer supply a platform for his work.
Andrews McMeel Syndication, which disperses Dilbert, did not instantly respond Saturday to demands for remark. But Adams safeguarded himself on social media versus those whom he stated “hate me and are canceling me.”
Dilbert is a long-running comic that pokes enjoyable at office-place culture.
The reaction started following an episode this past week of the YouTube reveal, “Real Coffee with Scott Adams.” Among other subjects, Adams referenced a Rasmussen Reports study that had asked whether individuals concurred with the declaration “It’s OKAY to be white.”
Most concurred, however Adams keptinmind that 26% of Black participants disagreed and others weren’t sure.
The Anti-Defamation League states the expression was promoted in 2017 as a trolling project by members of the conversation onlineforum 4chan however then started being utilized by som