biz
Explanation
This comic takes the common political talking point "It's time we run this country more like a business!" and follows it to its logical (and absurd) conclusion. A politician makes this declaration from a podium to cheering crowds. In the next panel, labeled "And so...," a citizen complains that the government is now calling their taxes a "subscription," the documents are covered with ads, and there may be "hot singles in my government" -- a reference to the sleazy clickbait ads found on commercial websites.
The humor comes from the literal interpretation of running a government like a business. If the government truly adopted private-sector practices, it would include all the worst aspects of modern commercial life: rebranding mandatory payments as optional-sounding subscriptions, plastering advertisements on everything for additional revenue, and using the same scammy clickbait tactics that plague the internet. The comic punctures the naivety of the "run government like a business" slogan by showing that businesses are not actually paragons of efficiency and public service -- they are engines of annoyance, exploitation, and shameless monetization.