Soylent Green: The Processing Facility at the End of the Economy

The line stretches around the block. Rain-soaked figures in threadbare clothing shuffle toward the entrance of a facility that promises them tomorrow. The billboards above tell the story of an economy designed to fail: Global inflation hits 40-year high. Food prices surge again — up 23%. Record corporate profits as millions struggle. Housing unaffordable for 74% of Americans. Real wages down 20% since 1975.
The facility entrance reads: SOYLENT GREEN Processing Facility. Feeding the Future. Welcome to a Better Tomorrow. All Citizens Will Be Processed.
An android in a black uniform directs the crowd. The sign beside him reads: New Comers This Way. Soylent Green. The prices on the board — eggs $6.12, milk $5.49, bread $4.98, gas $5.01 — are not future projections. They are current trajectories.
This is the economic endgame. The systematic destruction of purchasing power, housing affordability, and food security is not incompetence. It is architecture. Every policy that inflates prices, suppresses wages, and concentrates wealth is a step toward a population so desperate that it will accept any system that offers survival. The processing facility is that system.
When people cannot afford food, they accept whatever is offered. When they accept whatever is offered, they stop asking what is in it. When they stop asking what is in it, they have been processed. The line outside the facility is not a bread line. It is an intake queue. And the product being manufactured inside is not food. It is compliance.
The sign says “Feeding the Future.” The future being fed is not yours.
Transhumane Genocide: The Underground Report — available soon.