I have been reading this comic for a long time, and haven't ever really engaged with the community (or even really paid attention to her comments on each comic) so I was kind of taken aback by this in a huge way. I went into her short comic just assuming it'd be an interesting story, and I was definitely not prepared for the emotional whiplash.
I'm a former Christian and live in the US, so I can't help but view her "author's notes" at the bottom through the lens of someone very familiar with the evangelical "persecution" culture. This comic reminds me of the chick tracts (
wikipedia article) I was cajoled (read: forced) into handing out as a teenager and of the world view pushed by LaHaye and Jenkins' Left Behind series with the pastiche of cute bunnies to make it palatable or endearing.
I think the thing that bothers me the most is that she went out of her went to create a clearly fantasy world but used the
actual Bible. That alone says everything that this comic is trying to say. There is no subtlety in the message. It's not "social credit is bad" or "cancel culture run amok will ruin our lives" it's literally just "everyone hates Christians even though they are right and follow the one true god and are the only way to avoid hell".
Just... the part with the tweets talking about "the kind of people" that read the Bible and "what type of thinking" it can lead to... I just can't handle it. It's too on the nose about how modern day evangelicals in 1st-world countries with religious freedom think about how they are "unjustly" treated by "the mainstream".
The way she talks about how she "was" when she was atheist is also very telling. She says that she was obsessed with being superior others, and I can't tell that anything has changed from notes. Instead of feeling like she is better than others because she is smarter, she now feels better than others because she has moral superiority. I don't know anything about the author or her past, but this is how it all comes across to me from reading the comic and the notes that followed.