Every workday unfolds like a grim experiment in human herd behavior. People shuffle in and out, grazing on whatever mindless entertainment and processed food they can get their hands on, entirely unaware that they are less individuals and more livestock—bred for consumption, raised on entitlement, and conditioned to follow arbitrary rules without question.

These are not independent thinkers. They are human cattle—marked not by ear tags but by their desperate clinging to expired coupons, their blind allegiance to whichever media conglomerate spoon-feeds them opinions, and their unwavering commitment to demanding “better customer service” for problems they created themselves.

Rather than using decades of experience to enlighten, mentor, or create, they choose instead to gorge themselves on distractions, chewing the cud of celebrity scandals, workplace drama, and whatever latest nonsense social media algorithm vomited into their brains. They are not curious about the world—they are terrified of it. So they consume. They consume everything—food, gossip, opinions, outrage. And yet they create nothing.

And here you are, watching the cycle repeat, day after day, knowing deep down that resistance is futile. The herd will never break free, because it doesn’t want to. It needs the fences. It craves the routine. And all you can do is decide whether to play along or retreat into the absurdity of it all.