Editing 1601: Isolation

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The joke is a subversion of expectations:  On reading the first five and a half panels you're led to believe the comic is a commentary on how new technologies are often wrongly criticized for their effect on social interaction (Similar to [[1227: The Pace of Modern Life]]).  The sixth panel reveals that the person criticizing the new technology in each panel is actually the same unaging [[Cueball]] - and rather than the technologies referenced being the cause of social isolation, those around him have instead been using new technologies as excuses to ignore him for nearly 200 years, as they find him annoying.
 
The joke is a subversion of expectations:  On reading the first five and a half panels you're led to believe the comic is a commentary on how new technologies are often wrongly criticized for their effect on social interaction (Similar to [[1227: The Pace of Modern Life]]).  The sixth panel reveals that the person criticizing the new technology in each panel is actually the same unaging [[Cueball]] - and rather than the technologies referenced being the cause of social isolation, those around him have instead been using new technologies as excuses to ignore him for nearly 200 years, as they find him annoying.
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Alternatively, this comic is mocking those who critique technology as a cause of antisocial behavior, with Megan acting as a messenger on Randall's behalf-- telling the critics to "take a hint" that technology isn't what's causing antisocial behavior.
 
  
 
The end of [[1289: Simple Answers]] has a similar viewpoint of [[Cueball]] in this comic.
 
The end of [[1289: Simple Answers]] has a similar viewpoint of [[Cueball]] in this comic.

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