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Scott Adams, creator of the 'Dilbert" comic strip and Trump supporter, has died at age 68

Scott Adams, the creator of "Dilbert", a comic strip that was a vocal supporter Donald Trump, but whose career suffered after a "racist rant", died on Tuesday. His wife confirmed this. He was 68. Shelly Miles read out a message from Adams in an online livestream. The artist's strip, which was framed by the engineer with glasses and a perpetually bent tie, lampooned corporate America. Adams had 'posted on X regarding his metastatic prostate cancer decline and made a 'direct appeal to Trump in order to get his healthcare provider Kaiser Permanente Northern - California to schedule treatment using the targeted radiotherapy drug Pluvicto.

In a social media post from November 2, Trump replied, "On it."

The Republican President noted on Tuesday that the cartoonist had passed Truth Social.

Scott Adams has sadly passed away. He was an amazing guy who respected and liked me even when it wasn't trendy to do so. Trump wrote that he bravely fought against a terrible illness.

The first "Dilbert' comic strip appeared in 1989. It ran for many decades. It was at its height one of the most popular comic strips in the U.S. but it was dropped by many newspapers in 2023 following a racist rant on YouTube.

Adams called Black Americans a 'hate group' and suggested that white Americans "get the hell away from Blacks" in response to a poll conducted by a conservative organization purporting to prove that many African-Americans don't think it is OK to be a white person.

Later, he said his remarks were meant as hyperbole. He also disavowed racism and claimed that the media had not taken into account his context. (Reporting and editing by Doina chiacu, Scott Malone, and Sharon Singleton).

(source: Reuters)