For me it was obvious at the start, with the Mordenkainen's watchdog line into ogres (it's a reference to the summoner geeks
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zng5kRle4FA , of which this is a silly animation thing).
But like... it stands alone. The intentions of the creator doesn't change the end product, and ultimately just makes enjoying it ironically more delicious in this case. All historical art of note was made by people you'd think were mad today, right? Jack Chick's tracts- all of them- say a hell of a lot about Jack Chick, and are generally very amusing. Yes, it's obvious that he has serious problems with anything that he perceives as an issue for his extraordinarily conservative worldview, which is insanely everything, but I don't think it needs a satire tag to be amusing- even if it were done entirely on the square it would be hilarious. The book burning scene
is in the original comic- adding it wouldn't have been fair, by the rules they were playing with. But by simply portraying it flatly...
Jack Chick, on the other hand, likely feels that anyone seeing it at all is helping his cause slightly. Jack Chick's cause isn't to glorify Jack Chick, or to persuade everyone- he's operating on a save-a-soul idealism. That's his end goal, so if ten thousand people mock him before he reaches one credulous person who converts or even changes his belief system from one Jack Chick believes would have "damned" him into one that Jack Chick believes would "save" him (ex, from one brand of Christianity to another, such as Mormonism or Catholicism to anything Protestant),
he would count that as a win, right?
I think you see these things and are just saddened by how disturbed Jack Chick is, which is legit- I just think the whole thing is hilarious.
Anyway, you've already seen #1, but here's a list of some other choice picks;
http://www.toplessrobot.com/2008/09/the ... llfire.php