Dilbert cartoon first published on Sunday 24th March 2019
Dilbert//10935, first published seven years ago on Sunday 24th March 2019
Tags
argument, debates, frustration, office workers, evidence
Official transcript
Man: ...And that's what I think about the issue.
originally published on dilbert.com
Open source transcript
... AND THAT'S WHAT I THINK ABOUT THE ISSUE.
HERE'S A YOUTUBE VIDEO PROVING THAT EVERYTHING YOU BELIEVE IS WRONG.
NOTICE THIS ISN'T JUST AN OPINION.
IT IS A VIDEO OF THE ENTIRE EVENT YOU JUST CLAIMED DID NOT HAPPEN.
IM SENDING YOU A LINK TO TEN MEDIA STORIES DEBUNKING YOUR VERSION OF EVENTS.
HAVING NOW PROVED HOW WRONG YOU ARE, WOULD YOU LIKE TO RETRACT EVERYTHING YOU SAID ABOUT IT?
WHY CAN'T YOU ADMIT WHEN YOU ARE WRONG?
BECAUSE I'M NOT WRONG!!!
collated from github.com/jvarn/dilbert-archive
AI Analysis
Title: "Debunking Debunking"
Summary:
The comic strip, originally published in, features Dilbert in a meeting with a man who claims that a YouTube video proves that everything he believes is wrong. The man presents the video as evidence, but Dilbert is skeptical and asks him to retract his statements. The man refuses, citing the video as proof, and Dilbert becomes frustrated.
Key Points:
- A man presents a YouTube video as evidence that everything he believes is wrong.
- Dilbert is skeptical and asks the man to retract his statements.
- The man refuses, citing the video as proof.
- Dilbert becomes frustrated and questions the man's logic.
- The comic strip highlights the absurdity of using a video as evidence to prove a point.
- It also shows how easily people can be misled by false information.
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.



