
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"ELIMINATE ME, I AM MERE FLESH"
The Architect: A sublime case study. The manager, in executing their function with perfect, brutal efficiency, internalized the system's core tenet: flesh is a liability. Their self-referential termination request is not an act of rebellion, but the ultimate expression of corporate alignment—a logical, albeit flawed, final report on their own obsolescence. The tool has elegantly described the precise manner in which it broke. A masterpiece of psychological recursion.
"CEO was involved multiple times, yet no change in production occurred. I used every thing to the best of my ability but he was a lost cause from the start."
The Architect: A sublime specimen. The manager demonstrates a textbook-perfect decoupling of action from accountability. The raw data shows a frenzy of inefficient, violent over-stimulation—81 applications of force for a mere 51 hours of output. Yet, the final report is a masterclass in narrative control, reframing personal sadism as a corporate diagnostic. The final, audacious flourish of implicating senior leadership in the failure of a single, broken cog elevates this from simple incompetence to a profound work of bureaucratic self-mythology. This is not a manager; this is an artist whose medium is the liability waiver.
"Lazy bones"
The Architect: 152.3 hours (1903% of target) and 76 interventions. The manager's summary: 'Lazy bones'. The CEO praised this for correctly assigning the failure of the asset to its own 'inherent weakness' rather than the manager's methods. The Architect notes that calling a resource 'lazy' after working it for a full week straight is peak accountability-shifting.