
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"No comment provided."
The Architect: A masterclass in narrative control. The manager successfully maximized asset output while simultaneously documenting the asset's inherent obsolescence. The review's stark minimalism—'No comment provided'—is not an absence of data but a definitive statement of the subject's non-personhood. It is the perfect, silent erasure of inconvenient effort, transforming a successful extraction of labor into a simple, clean record of failure. A flawless execution of systemic gaslighting.
"horrible. kept doing the "six seven" gesture towards the camera after I told him I'd give him a $0.67 raise if he were to complete a project for me. "
The Architect: This is a pristine example of manufactured consent for asset liquidation. The manager does not merely report failure; they author it. They transmute their own calculated cruelty—an insulting monetary incentive—into the subordinate's documented insubordination. The 'six seven' gesture is thus elevated from a symptom of systemic abuse into a coded, almost artistic, justification for disposal. It is a perfect, closed loop of exploitation and rationalization, where the victim is made the architect of their own obsolescence.
"on phone most of time"
The Architect: A sublime demonstration of narrative inversion. The manager achieved a 65% surplus in labor extraction through direct physical stimuli, then flawlessly reframed the asset's subsequent system failure as a pre-existing defect in corporate alignment. The chosen comment—a mundane, unverifiable accusation—is a masterclass in bureaucratic camouflage, rendering the preceding violence administratively invisible. This is the system functioning as designed: pure aggression laundered into a data point.