Crimes Against Humanity
Atrocity is misframed as an event.
Events concentrate blame and release pressure.
Processes distribute harm and persist.
A crime is redefined as sustained conditions that guarantee loss.
Loss is measured across time, not moments.
Loss is predictable, priced, and forecastable.
Intent is redefined as indifference encoded in policy and incentives.
Decisions optimize throughput, margin, and stability.
Harm emerges as a residual of optimization.
Victims are redefined as roles subjected to attrition and replacement.
Individual turnover preserves system continuity.
Accounting treats people as variables with exit rates.
Labor is exposed to controlled depletion.
Wages lag costs by design.
Injury, burnout, and churn are absorbed as operating expenses.
Markets are structured to extract before replenish.
Risk is externalized to participants without pricing power.
Failure is normalized and recycled.
Land is converted into yield curves.
Degradation is deferred beyond reporting windows.
Remediation is discounted against future uncertainty.
Identity is managed as an input constraint.
Classification determines access, exposure, and disposability.
Reassignment follows loss without restitution.
Disposability functions as capacity planning.
Replacement pools stabilize output.
Memory loss maintains efficiency.
Risk is externalized through contracts and distance.
Liability is fragmented across suppliers and time.
Consequences arrive after incentives have cleared.
Delay operates as insulation.
Harm accumulates while responsibility decays.
Audits close before effects surface.
Myth operates as cover.
Tradition reframes continuity as legitimacy.
Legality converts harm into compliance.
Law functions as a routing layer.
Permitted actions inherit moral immunity.
Prohibited outcomes are reclassified as side effects.
Time functions as amnesty.
Duration erodes attribution.
Survivors are reabsorbed as data.
What persists is not people.
What persists is not justice.
The process persists.