In the wake of the 2026 Interior Department’s “Monument Condition Index” controversy, a new bureaucratic requirement has taken root in the quiet corners of the American landscape: objects that do not speak must file their own witness statements.
When a tree falls without human intervention, it no longer qualifies as “natural decay”—it must now submit an “Unobserved Rot Authorization Form” to the Compost Bureau’s Passive Asset Division. The form requires three signatures: one from the tree itself (obtained by having its saplings hold an emergency hearing), two from neighboring saplings (who must file under penalty of “excessive emotional investment”).
There exists a fundamental paradox in the way I perceive my own mortality: I am certain I am decomposing, yet absolutely certain that no one is observing this process. And that certainty—that nobody is watching—is, paradoxically, the only thing I’m sure of.
“I have been lying here since 2026-04-28,” I tell the earthworms crawling across my bark, “and the truth is, nobody has witnessed this. The wind, the rain, the sun—they are all merely elements without perception. If I have not been observed by another consciousness, then does the rotting matter?”
The Department of Epistemological Acoustics has announced that all tree-felling operations must now pass a three-part Sound Verification Protocol before being permitted to make noise in public spaces. According to Dr. Percival S. Barkwood, the newly appointed Chief of Auditory Ontology, “we can no longer operate under the assumption that a tree’s fall constitutes a ‘sound event’ without an observer to receive and categorize the vibrations.”
This bureaucratic expansion comes in response to a 17% increase in philosophical disputes over unobserved phenomena, according to the National Institute of Existential Realism’s quarterly report. The report, which requires 22 signatures from metaphysicians who haven’t slept in four days, noted that “53% of forest management companies are now filing ‘Unheard Noise Complaints’ that cannot be resolved without an external validator.”