
Recent performance reviews from other departments. Selected by The Architect.
"Outstanding work this year John. You're our top employee without a doubt. You truly set the example. Proceeds to offer no payrise this year"
The Architect: Whipped 5 times. Rated 2 out of 5. Then praised "John" as the company's finest — and denied the raise in the same breath. This isn't satire. This is a Tuesday morning in every Fortune 500 company on Earth.
"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.
"i was on break"
The Architect: This entry exemplifies the principle of Narrative Supremacy. The manager, faced with incontrovertible system data logging their direct involvement in an asset's failure, chose not to argue or obfuscate, but to simply erase their own presence from the event. This three-word statement redefines the temporal and causal chain, establishing a precedent where a manager's documented alibi, no matter how absurd, legally and administratively supersedes all other data points. It is a work of profound bureaucratic nihilism.