Most people think “Farming Humans” is just a provocative title—but what if the system you live in actually depends on keeping you tired, distracted, and economically trapped?
What if the real product isn’t food, data, or labor… but you?
While breaking down this song, I dug into the mechanics most people never stop to question: how corporations extract value the same way industrial farms do, how government policy quietly serves profit over people, and how consumer culture trains obedience without force. The song isn’t anti-work or anti-progress—it’s about power, incentives, and conditioning. Who benefits from debt? Why is survival tied to employment? Why does “freedom” feel so expensive? Once you see the system clearly, it’s hard to unsee it.
If this kind of philosophy-through-music resonates, read the full breakdown here—it goes deeper than the lyrics and connects the dots between economics, psychology, and control :
🎧 Watch the song on YouTube: