I just necromanced my old account from 2015ish, so I'm both new here and not. Hi! I just read this whole thread, and like many others I feel a need to pour my thoughts out there. (I'm no good at using few words, sorry about the massive blocks of text!)
First of all, I too think the comic itself was fine. Hamfisted, unelegant, but fine. Then came the last page, and the author's note and it all went wild - the things I had thought odd suddenly made sense. Her notes are steeped in classic toxic evangelical thinking, which fits with the demonization of regular leftists views in the Bible 2.0 interview, the christian persecution complex and hating on things like yoga in the comic.
Some seem to think that Christians of this type only exist in the USA, as a Norwegian I can debunk that. Evangelical churches in America started sending their priests to travel the Scandinavian countries and build new evangelical societies more than a hundred years ago, and never stopped, still sending priests and believers back and forth. We have many "free churches", big and small, many of whom act in a way not far from what one sees in cults. I've lost several friends to them
These grow in numbers as our lutheran church grows more accepting and lose their flocks. And they all seem to have a hotline to the worst Trumpist megachurch madness in the US.
I'm wondering if Minna has been drawn into a real life evangelical church, or fallen down the rabbit hole online? I may be projecting, but to me she always seemed dangerously depressed. No life, no sleep hygiene, living with family and doing nothing other than making (great) art, she seemed so vulnerable! Just pressuring herself on (and I sadly doubt the fandom pedestal she was put on helped). The terrible self-loathing fits, I've rarely met a depressed creative who didn't struggle with that. And that made her ripe for picking for predators. Some churches, much like some predatory men, seem able to smell insecurity, depression and and self-hate on people. They tailor their approach to that person and make it seem they have whatever the person needs and longs for - purpose, love, affection, a fitting narrative, being told they were right... To Minna they offered a coping strategy: yes, you are terrible, but everyone is terrible and God loves you! That's gonna be HARD to leave.
I wasn't aware of the Emil incident (and still don't know what she's said of BLM?) so I looked into it and WOW.
I find this worse than the bible thumping, how did the fandom recover? Every Asian kid in the west has had to hear that phrase. I asked a Finnish friend and they said it's widespread there, as it is in Norway. But her handling of it was REALLY bad. She could have simply said she was sorry for hurting people. This especially stuck with me:
There's simply too much that's considered offensive in some anglophone countries that I'm not aware of, and it's not a minefield that I'm keen on navigating, nor am I interested in the dumbing down that results from having to walk on eggshells around every single joke or avoiding jokes all together.
That doesn't bode well for how she'll handle criticism of the Zealot Bunniez. I guess we'll have to wait and see... Even if she finishes the story arc in a good way, we'll never have the additional story arcs that could have been. And as neither straight nor cis I won't be able to get the same reading experience, knowing that the author likely wants me and those like me to repent and abstain or burn in hell.