Joe Biden, Dilbert and prostate cancer
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“Every day is a nightmare, and evening is even worse,” he said. Dilbert the comic strip first appeared in 1989, poking fun at office culture. It ran for decades in numerous newspapers but disappeared following racist remarks by Adams. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Scott Adams, whose comic strip Dilbert was one of the most popular in America before he was undone by racist comments, says he is dying of prostate cancer. Adams, 67, reportedly made the announcement Monday during his YouTube show “Real Coffee with Scott Adams.” He said he believes he only has months to live, NPR reports.
Plus, Mike Pence criticizes President Donald Trump and the pope warns against hatred and “religious propaganda.”
Nodules can be cancerous or non-cancerous, according to the National Cancer Institute. ABC News reports that it is too early to determine whether Biden’s nodule is “a benign lump caused by ...
Before his cancer diagnosis, Biden had been taking the train from Delaware to Washington, meeting with his post-presidential staff, allies and former Cabinet secretaries, accordin