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Scott Adams’ Final Cry: Embracing Faith Amid a Hostile Media Storm

America lost one of its most candid and provocative voices on January 13, 2026 when Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert and a lightning rod for conservative thought, passed away at 68 after a battle with cancer. In a final public statement made as he faced death, Adams wrote that he accepts Jesus Christ as his Lord and Savior — a turn toward faith that should give comfort to millions who respected his intellect and honesty.

Scott Adams was never content to play the media’s game; he built a career on telling uncomfortable truths and insisting on usefulness over virtue signaling. He became a mentor to countless conservatives — teaching persuasion, skeptical thinking, and a fierce independence that the Left desperately tries to silence.

That final message was stark and unmistakable: “I accept Jesus Christ as my lord and savior, and I look forward to spending an eternity with him,” Adams wrote, a confession that he and many of his friends had discussed during his final days. His ex-wife, Shelly Miles, tearfully helped share the statement with the world, and the post circulated widely on social platforms as tributes poured in from the right.

Conservative media and friends like Andrew Klavan and Megyn Kelly rightly pushed back on the predictable left-wing obituaries that tried to smear his legacy rather than honor a complicated man who did more to wake Americans up than many polished journalists ever will. It’s telling that the same outlets that ignore our side’s heroes rush to caricature them after death — the left’s moral grandstanding continues even in the face of a dying man’s honest final words.

Adams didn’t just convert; he left a plea that reflects the best of American citizenship — work hard, be useful, and pay your benefits forward. He urged readers to carry on what they’d gained from his ideas, a last civic act that should inspire conservatives to keep building institutions, communities, and faith-based networks that actually serve people.

Let Patriots be clear-eyed about Scott Adams: he was imperfect, fearless, and ultimately human, and his last act was to embrace a faith that has sustained our nation for generations. Now is not the time to surrender his lessons to the cancel mob; it’s a time to defend free speech, celebrate the power of repentance and faith, and redouble our work to ensure that voices like his continue to shape America’s future.

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