automatic
Explanation
This comic features a conversation between a human and God about reincarnation. God explains that reincarnation exists as a solution to an administrative problem: it's "the only way to make the universe fair without me having to work all day long." In other words, God implemented reincarnation as an automated justice system so He wouldn't have to manually intervene in every moral situation.
The human asks the obvious follow-up: in a reincarnation system, if you're good you get rewarded in your next life, and if you're bad you get punished -- so there's no need for God to actively issue judgments or rewards. It's a self-running karmic system. God confirms this enthusiastically.
But then the human raises the critical flaw: "But if we humans make laws and enforce them, doesn't that break the system?" If humans create their own justice systems with police, courts, and prisons, they're interfering with the karmic cycle. Someone who would have been punished through reincarnation is instead punished by human law, and the whole automated system breaks down.
The final panel shows God appearing in what looks like a doorway of light, ominously declaring "That's when I come in with the brimstone" -- implying that God has to personally intervene with divine punishment whenever human-made justice disrupts His elegant automated system. The joke is that God designed reincarnation specifically to avoid having to do work, but human civilization keeps forcing Him to step in anyway, defeating the entire purpose. It's a satirical take on theodicy (why God allows evil) reframed as a lazy engineer's frustration with users breaking their automated system.