Dilbert cartoon first published on Tuesday 22nd April 1997
Dilbert//2929, first published 29 years ago on Tuesday 22nd April 1997
Tags
family freindly policy childless people tax child care lower profit sharing time off pick up slack victim
Official transcript
Dilbert tells Alice, "This so-called 'Family Friendly' policy is like a tax on childless people."
Dilbert continues, "You get child-care; I get lower profit-sharing. YOU get time off for family; I get to pick up your slack . . ."
Dilbert says, "I'm a victim, but in some strange way I'm enjoying it."
Alice makes a fist and rolls up her sleeve. She says, "Then you'll love this."
originally published on dilbert.com
Open source transcript
THIS SO-CALLED "FAMILY FRIENDLY" POLICY IS LIKE A TAX ON CHILDLESS PEOPLE.
YOU GET CHILDCARE; I GET LOWER PROFIT- SHARING. YOU GET TIME OFF FOR FAMILY; I GET TO PICK UP YOUR SLACK I'M A VICTIM, BUT IN SOME STRANGE WAY I'M ENJOYING THEN YOU'LL LOVE THIS.
IT.
collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive
AI Analysis
Comic Strip Title: "Family-Friendly Policy"
Summary:
The comic strip revolves around a man named Dilbert, who is frustrated with his company's family-friendly policy. The policy, which he refers to as a "tax on childless people," requires employees to pick up their coworkers' slack when they take time off for family. Dilbert feels like he is being unfairly burdened by this policy and is seeking a way to opt out.
Key Points:
- Dilbert is unhappy with his company's family-friendly policy.
- The policy requires employees to pick up their coworkers' slack when they take time off for family.
- Dilbert feels like he is being unfairly burdened by this policy.
- He is seeking a way to opt out of the policy.
generated by llama-3.2-11b-vision-instruct
Accompanying textual content, such as title, tags and transcripts, is shown here if we have it. Not every comic has all of these, and they seem to be a bit hit and miss even on the official website.