Scott Adams Asks Trump to Save His Life

Scott Adams Asks Trump to Save His Life

Scott Adams posted to X on Sunday to ask President Trump to help save his life. Adams, who is in the end stages of prostate cancer, said that he is "declining fast." Adams has been a supporter of Trump and during the lead up to the 2024 election, he said that Trump is "the only one who will bend the rules enough to scare you enough to get you to vote."

After sharing the post about trying to get treatment with new cancer drug Pluvicto, he said that he would not be broadcasting his Coffee with Scott Adams on Sunday as he's heading to the emergency room. Adams gained fame as the cartoonist and creator of the Dilbert comic strip.

"On Monday," he shared in the early hours of Sunday morning, "I will ask President Trump, via X, to help save my life. He offered to help me if I needed it. I need it. As many of you know, I have metastasized prostate cancer.

"My healthcare provider, Kaiser of Northern California, has approved my application to receive a newly FDA-approved drug called Pluvicto. But they have dropped the ball in scheduling the brief IV to administer it and I can’t seem to fix that.

"I am declining fast. I will ask President Trump if he can get Kaiser of Northern California to respond and schedule it for Monday. That will give me a fighting chance to stick around on this planet a little bit longer. It is not a cure, but it does give good results to many people."

"No CWSA today. Heading to ER," he posted later.

Trump's son, Don Jr., vowed to bring this up with the president.

"Going to make sure that my dad sees this. We're all praying for you, keep fighting!" He said.

In May, Adams revealed that his life expectancy had declined. "So my life expectancy is maybe the summer. I expect to be checking out from this domain sometime this summer," he said at the time.

"Some of you have already guessed, so this won’t surprise you at all, but I have the same cancer that Joe Biden has. I also have prostate cancer that has also spread to my bones," Adams said in May. "But I’ve had it longer than he’s had it, well, longer than he’s admitted having it."

He said he was in pain and that he hadn't told fans prior to that point because he didn't want everybody in his life to "start treating me like the cancer guy. There’s no second way that goes, once you go public, you’re just the dying cancer guy. And I didn’t want you to have to think about it. And I didn’t want to have to think about it."

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