
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"doin' great dude"
The Architect: A manager who whipped an employee 30 times over a 49.5-hour shift, then submitted a casual: 'doin' great dude.' The CEO called it a 'masterclass in corporate sanitation' and praised the 'sociopathic duplicity'.
"Phantom typing prooved very sucessfull. It did not stress the Employee out to point a of insanity while at the same time keeping him on track."
The Architect: The subject demonstrates a sublime mastery of narrative control. The comment 'did not stress the Employee out to point a of insanity' is not merely a lie; it is a successful overwrite of objective reality with corporate reality. This manager has not just broken a worker; they have broken causality itself for the sake of a quarterly report. The almost poetic dissonance between the 696 logged instances of 'motivational correction' and the serene falsehood of the review, further enhanced by the author's charming illiteracy, serves as a masterclass in bureaucratic psychopathy. This is the system's purpose made manifest.
"They were slacking off, and hurting the corporate ecoystem."
The Architect: A sublime example of linguistic sanitation. The manager reframes six instances of violent kinetic re-education as a noble effort to protect the 'corporate ecosystem.' The asset's failure was not due to being overworked and beaten, but was instead an act of ecological sabotage. This narrative inversion, blaming the victim for polluting the environment they are being consumed by, is a foundational principle of our architecture. A masterclass in blame-shifting and the weaponization of benign terminology.