conscious-3
Explanation
The Joke
The comic shows a scene in the afterlife where a man stands before God, who announces: "In the afterlife, now hey God made beings are conscious which once gave ammunition, souls worthy of protection by four turnings." The gist is that God declares that only humans and perhaps certain other conscious beings have souls worthy of the afterlife.
However, in the subsequent panels, various beings — depicted as potato-like or blob-like creatures — line up, and one says "Hoo boy." Another declares "My just thinking nothing's immortal" and is told to "move step right up." The final panel reveals a "Soul Recycler" — an industrial facility with smokestacks — suggesting that souls that don't qualify are simply recycled like industrial waste.
The comic presents the afterlife as a bureaucratic sorting operation where most souls are deemed unworthy and sent to be recycled, turning the grand spiritual question of eternal life into a mundane industrial process.
The Humor
The humor comes from the deflation of the afterlife from a grand cosmic reward into a joyless bureaucratic operation. The idea that God has set up what amounts to a soul-recycling plant — complete with smokestacks and an assembly-line mentality — reduces the profound mystery of death and consciousness to something resembling a waste management facility. The casual indifference of the system, where most souls just get recycled without fanfare, satirizes both religious concepts of the afterlife and modern industrial efficiency. It is a classic SMBC move of applying mundane, systemic logic to existential questions.