Office politics.

AuthorWeissmueller, Zach
PositionSoundbite - Scott Adams - Interview

Scott Adams is the creator of the award-winning comic strip Dilbert, which satirizes American corporate culture. More recently, he's gained a following for his musings about the "unstoppable clown car that is Donald Trump." In those blog posts, Adams analyzes what he sees as the GOP frontrunner's highly effective persuasion methods. Reason TV's Zach Weissmueller chatted with the cartoonist in October.

Q: What's your fascination with Donald Trump?

A: My special fascination is his ability to persuade. I have a background in hypnosis, and I see in Trump a persuasion technique that is probably invisible to the public.

Q: Are there principles that you think are best applied to the way governments operate?

A: My preferred model is something like business. What does business do all the time? They test things small that make sense. We could do that. The states can test just about anything, and then the federal government could look at the results. I would love to see a candidate who said, "I don't have an opinion. I'm gonna go with the majority on social issues...and if it's economics or world stuff and I can test it, I will!"

Q: You've written that "the paradox of capitalism is that adding a bunch of bad-sounding ideas together creates something incredible." What led you to that conclusion?

A: The amazing thing about the economy is that most people are failing most of the time. Nine out of 10 new businesses fail. But while they're failing, there are people working for them. They're buying things from vendors. Even the things that are succeeding are only succeeding until they don't, right? So everything is a failure in progress. The genius of capitalism is that it not just survives that failure but is built upon it. All that activity creates economic goodness for everybody.

Q: People might be surprised to hear your generally positive feelings toward capitalism. Dilbert kind of reads like an indictment of it forcing everyone into a literal box in the...

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