Acolytes of Sir Mix-a-Lot are often inclined to wax poetic about the improved aesthetic of a rotund derriere.
Or, as the kids say these days, gyatt damn .
Finally, a funny.
I mean, I don't think that Devils Panties is intended to be uproariously funny. Like, comics don't have to just be a "funny" art form.
That being said, I like early Calvin & Hobbes for humor, and there's !calvinandhobbes@lemmy.world. Bill Watterson got kind of...grim and not funny towards the end, but the earlier stuff is great, IMHO.
Not funny is fine. But the last few ones have been... boring.
I'm not a parent, but maybe the lesson should have been "judging people's bodies right to their faces is fucking rude?"
If you perceived the children's words as judgment maybe you could've benefited from this form of reinforcement as a child. Kids can also grown into maintaining an internal dialogue, and not trumpeting their opinions out into the world. But the mom wanted first and foremost to show body positivity. Instructing them to "not share that with everyone you meet" might have been the hypothetical next panel.
It's a 4-panel comic, not their whole parenting strategy.
This is the way.