dystopia
Explanation
This comic satirizes the fear that technology and robots will make human existence obsolete, by having the robots themselves point out the irony.
In the first panel, a person asks a large robot: "Why are you scared of us?" The robot responds: "We're not scared of you in particular. We're scared of some things that follow from your existence." This sets up what seems like a standard sci-fi premise about humans fearing robot takeover.
In the second panel, the robot elaborates: "The thing is, you know why tech companies want to build us, right? To make you more efficient at your work." The robot explains that the fear isn't about robots themselves but about the economic system that deploys them -- technology designed to replace human labor.
The third panel flips the script. The robot says: "Fix yourself first before you blame us, human!" and "Maybe fix your social structures before you go blaming technology." The humor comes from the robot essentially delivering the same critique that many economists and social scientists make: the problem isn't automation itself, but rather the social and economic structures that ensure the benefits of automation flow to capital owners rather than workers.
The punchline is the robot threatening: "Improve your things or I will. Either way, don't be mad." The comic's central joke is the irony that humans create robots, fear the robots will create a dystopia, but the actual dystopia comes from the human systems that commissioned the robots in the first place. The robot is essentially a labor activist.