Dilbert creator Scott Adams just came up with a very interesting idea.
During recent episode of his podcast, he suggested the creation of a new government department called the ‘Department of Imaginary Concerns’ which could handle Democrat worries about things like climate change panic, Trump taking away democracy, Russia collusion, the Signal controversy, Elon Musk stealing people’s Social Security numbers and more.
Adams is obviously joking when he says all of this but the reason his idea is funny is because it’s so rooted in reality. Democrats push these imaginary concerns every single day, which are then amplified by the propaganda media.
Adams suggests it would be hilarious to hear the media asking Trump about one of these issues and him responding that he has referred the matter to the Department of Imaginary Concerns.
Adams is clearly onto something here. Watch:
Department of Imaginary Concerns
Signal app drama has Scott Adams proposing a bold fix: a new gov’t dept to tackle all the wild, made-up fears swirling in Democrat minds. Genius or madness? You decide.
Imaginary Concerns like:
Climate change crisis
Russia collusion
Houthi’s… pic.twitter.com/ygw68GyfJN— jay plemons (@jayplemons) March 27, 2025
The Signal nontroversy is the one Democrats are really pinning their hopes on right now. Not only is Judge Boasberg ordering all agencies involved to save chats, House Oversight Democrats are grabbing hold with both hands.
The Hill reports:
Oversight Dems ask for multi-inspectors general probe of Trump Cabinet Signal chat
House Oversight and Government Reform Committee Democrats are asking the inspectors general at national security agencies whose leaders discussed a pending airstrike in a Signal chat to investigate the matter, including what laws were violated in the process.
“This incident raises grave concerns about a potential pattern of misuse of unsecured communication platforms for sensitive discussions and the possibility that American military and intelligence professionals may have been compromised by the reckless dissemination of such highly sensitive national security information,” Rep. Gerry Connolly (Va.), the top Democrat on the panel, wrote in a letter.
“It is critical that your offices investigate this matter and any other incidents in which senior national security leaders in the Trump Administration have, either through incompetence or neglect, compromised highly sensitive or classified national security information.”
This looks like a job for the Department of Imaginary Concerns.
Read the full article here