coming
Explanation
This comic satirizes the Silicon Valley tech-religion crossover by imagining "Silicon Valley Baptism" as the most popular religion of the 2030s.
A preacher delivers a sermon that is essentially a breathless string of tech-hype buzzwords and futurist predictions: brothers and sisters, entities, singularity, Mars colonization, superintelligent AI, exponential growth, and so on. The congregation is swept up in fervor, and instead of shouting "Amen!" they shout "ABOT!" -- a portmanteau or abbreviation that replaces the traditional religious exclamation with something tech-flavored.
The joke is that the techno-optimist community already functions like a religion -- complete with prophetic predictions ("the singularity is coming!"), unfalsifiable claims, evangelical fervor, and a charismatic preacher whipping followers into rapturous devotion. By literally turning it into a baptismal church service, Weinersmith highlights how tech utopianism has all the structural features of religious faith: promises of transcendence, apocalyptic urgency, and communal ritual. The caption at the bottom -- "Silicon Valley Baptism is the most popular religion of the 2030s" -- delivers the punchline by stating this absurd conflation as a matter-of-fact future history.