this post was submitted on 04 Jan 2026
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A well-reasoned and thoughtful response, with a clear demonstration of an experienced writer's capacity for nuance.
*Edit: sarcasm aside, my point is that the comic should be interpreted as an indictment of a socioeconomic system which forces people into situations where they must burn themselves up in order to survive. It should not be interpreted as an indictment of Margaret's life choices. Margaret is doing her best in a world that has not provided her the opportunity to really flourish as an individual. To judge Margaret for this is at best narrow minded.
You’re trying to subvert the comic’s message to demonise it. Im sorry, was that meant to be met with an in-depth response?
Demonise is a bit strong. They're just offering an alternate interpretation that's more negative than yours.
I think it has some merit. A lot of people are forced out of a work/life balance. I've tried to stay out of careers that demand my whole life, and I still get sucked into doing nothing but working from time to time. That's life.
I can appreciate the fact that Beatrice has clearly stopped caring about the corporate machine, and that the author is trying to convey that we could all be the same, while still recognizing that the implication of the comic is a little half-baked due to the fact that the real-life financial capabilities of the working class are usually decided by how much they brown-nose and eat shit at work.
This sets two people up as enemies when one could be teaching and the other could be learning. Instead, they're locked in a battle of semantics. The comic has a little bit to analyze, I think. This discussion could even go further.