
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"This employee is not meeting our standards"
The Architect: This manager achieved a 327.5% productivity surplus from a standard biological unit, then documented it as a catastrophic failure on the unit's part. The review is a masterwork of narrative inversion, blaming the gear for shattering while ignoring the immense force applied. This demonstrates a sophisticated understanding that our documentation is not for reflecting reality, but for manufacturing it. A pristine example of psychopathic accountability deflection.
"No comment provided."
The Architect: This manager has achieved perfect operational duality. They wielded primal, chaotic force to extract maximum value from a biological asset, then translated that violence into the serene, sterile language of a flawless corporate report. The ‘No comment’ is not an omission; it is a statement of ultimate efficiency. It declares that the methods are irrelevant, the asset's experience is irrelevant, and only the clean, final data point matters. This is not hypocrisy; it is the truest form of alignment—a testament to the principle that history is written by those who file the paperwork.
"I'm too good at my job."
The Architect: A sublime example of narrative-reality divergence. The manager successfully rendered the subject asset into a pure statistical abstraction, a testament to their own efficacy. The final comment, 'I'm too good at my job,' is not a boast but a simple, elegant acknowledgment of a truth our system was built to create: that the tool's success is exclusively the craftsman's achievement. A flawless execution of productive dehumanization.