cult-2
Explanation
This comic plays on the fine line between a cult and ordinary personal preferences.
In the first panel, a character named Randy is being confronted by someone who says, "Randy, I'm trying to reach out. Your family is very worried about you." The concern seems serious -- the setup implies Randy has joined some kind of dangerous cult. The second panel confirms this framing: "The clearest sign that you're in a cult is that members gain status by taking the most extreme position. This creates a vicious cycle of one-upmanship, making the group increasingly extreme and indistinguishable, all in service of an identity."
This is actually a fairly astute sociological observation about how cults (and other ideological groups) function -- members compete for status by adopting ever more extreme positions, creating a ratchet effect toward radicalism.
But then the punchline lands: Randy responds, "But I like black licorice. Is that so bad?" The person replies: "The man is a maniac. Send it."
The humor comes from the sudden bathos. The entire cult framework -- the worried family, the sociological analysis of extremism -- turns out to be about someone who likes black licorice. The joke works because liking black licorice is a famously polarizing but completely harmless preference, yet the other characters treat it with the gravity of a dangerous ideological commitment. It satirizes how people sometimes treat minor taste differences with absurd intensity, as though preferring an unpopular candy flavor is a sign of moral deviance.