HomeUncategorizedDilbert Died
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Tom Hyland
Tom Hyland
1 month ago

A pretty good article. https://www.oregonlive.com/entertainment/2026/01/cartoonist-scott-adams-creator-of-office-satire-dilbert-dies-at-68.html

The phrase “turbo cancer” has become very familiar. What happened to Gerard Van der Leun was described as such. Gerard wrote a few snarky remarks bragging about getting “the big prick.” Then boom. Scott Adams didn’t fail as quickly. However, he cursed people on his podcast for non-compliance… until… he did a minimal amount of research and voiced his regrets for getting vaxxed. How do so many people believe government loves you? They hate a lot of government for its unbridled evil then flip the other direction convinced of its benevolent love.

ghostsniper
ghostsniper
1 month ago
Reply to  Tom Hyland

“How do so many people believe government loves you?”
=========

They’ve never tasted the whip.
Up to that, it’s just childish silliness.
If you are unfortunate enough to have it forced on you, you will never forget the overwhelming pressure from the shear amount of blatant criminality it harbors.

Joe
Joe
1 month ago
Reply to  Tom Hyland

I had a close friend die from turbo. He said that he knew within a few days of getting the “jab” that something was wrong. Rush also was very outgoing and positive about the “jab” and then it got him. As an aside,

The Greek word pharmakeia appears in Galatians 5:20 and Revelation 18:23. Terms from the same root word appear in Revelation 9:21Revelation 21:8, and Revelation 22:15. These are typically translated into English as “sorcery,” “witchcraft,” or “sorcerer.” Ancient Greek uses of pharmakeia closely mirror the generic modern English word drugs ; the same Greek root word produced English terms such as pharmacy and pharmacist.