Soylent Processing: The Stadium Solution

They always told you the stadiums were for sports. For concerts. For community gatherings. What they never mentioned was the processing capacity. Tens of thousands of bodies, pre-sorted into sections, with controlled entry and exit points. The infrastructure of mass processing was built in plain sight and sold as entertainment.
The Soylent Green scenario isn’t fiction — it’s logistics. When population reduction meets resource scarcity, the machinery of processing already exists. Every major city has multiple facilities designed to hold, sort, and move tens of thousands of human bodies with mechanical efficiency. The android enforcement class ensures compliance at the gates.
You watched them rehearse it during lockdowns. Stadiums converted to processing centers overnight — testing sites, injection sites, holding facilities. The public accepted it because the sign out front said “health.” Next time the sign will say something else, but the function remains identical: sort, process, dispose.
The crowd doesn’t know it’s being processed until the gates lock behind them. By then, the conveyor is already moving. This is the endgame of a system that views human beings as biomass — raw material to be converted, consumed, or eliminated based on utilitarian calculus programmed into machines that feel nothing.
Transhumane Genocide: The Underground Report — available soon.