Lapdog
Explanation
The Joke
A character asks why humans are so soft and defenseless, and another explains that humans essentially domesticated themselves. By creating a steady supply of food via agriculture, humans removed the evolutionary pressures that had selected for toughness. Instead, traits like attractiveness became the primary selection criteria: "All the tall, attractive people said 'now how to make lots of varieties of these? Let's sort it on a spreadsheet.'" Within a few generations, humans bred themselves into soft, helpless creatures — the same way we turned wolves into lapdogs.
The punchline comes when they observe that if you look at a typical human browsing the internet, "we've completed the domestication and selective breeding to purge all human history of vigor." The final panel labels this "hell," with the observation that humans have essentially turned themselves into their own lapdogs.
The Humor
The comic presents a satirical evolutionary argument that humans have done to themselves exactly what they did to wolves: selectively bred for docility, cuteness, and dependence rather than survival fitness. The comparison between a modern human scrolling through the internet and a lapdog sitting on a couch is both funny and uncomfortably apt.
The escalation is key to the humor. It starts with a reasonable observation (agriculture reduced survival pressures), builds through a plausible-sounding evolutionary argument, and arrives at the devastating conclusion that modern humans are essentially pets — but with no one holding the leash. The final panel's "This is hell" undercuts any remaining dignity.
Broader Context
The concept of human self-domestication is a real hypothesis in evolutionary biology. Researchers have noted that humans share many physical traits with domesticated animals: flatter faces, smaller teeth, reduced aggression, and more varied appearance. SMBC takes this genuine scientific idea and pushes it to its darkest comedic conclusion — that the process is now complete and we've become our own lapdogs.