
Efficiency Eats the Lunch Break
The cartoon mocks how corporate AI rhetoric frames productivity as universal progress while its real effect is often to intensify surveillance and time-discipline for workers with the least autonomy, leaving comfort and actual freedom concentrated at the top.
A sleek, futuristic corporate cafeteria is staged like a showroom for progress: a giant wall display trumpets 'AI Productivity Gains' with a rocket-like line graph blasting upward. Directly beneath it, rank-and-file employees sit at lunch tables built onto airport-style conveyor belts, gliding nonstop past clocks, barcode scanners, and signs that read 'Optimized Break: 7 Minutes' and 'Do More With More Tech.' Workers in badges juggle soup, sandwiches, and laptops as they slide by, some barely getting a bite before being carried onward. Above them, on a glass mezzanine, executives enjoy a calm, elegant lunch at a long stationary table with linen, wine glasses, and no time pressure. The composition makes the hierarchy unmistakable: the people supposedly 'helped' by efficiency are mechanized by it, while those with power remain untouched by the speedup.
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