Nation Confirms Revolution Was Mostly An Administrative Error
Nepal's 'revolution' now just a very big spreadsheet typo.
The recent upheaval in Nepal, initially mischaracterized by some as a genuine political revolution, has now been officially reclassified. According to internal memorandums from the newly reconstituted Ministry of Post-Uprising Reassessment, the entire affair was, in fact, a colossal administrative error. Apparently, a misplaced decimal point in an Excel spreadsheet detailing public grievances led to a computational overestimation of societal discontent by approximately 7,300%. The resulting widespread civil disobedience, therefore, was merely an enthusiastic, albeit misinformed, public response to incorrectly tabulated data.
What was once described by breathless international media as a society reaching its "boiling point" now appears to have been a collective misunderstanding of a clerical oversight. Citizens, it seems, were simply following erroneous instructions. The former ruling class, now reinstated with a fresh set of stationary, is said to be reviewing the incident as a "valuable lesson in data entry vigilance."
Meanwhile, local journalists, bless their hearts, continue to file dispatches suggesting deep-seated societal shifts. One particularly earnest scribe, Kunda Dixit, was overheard still babbling about "stunning turns of events" and "how society reached the boiling point," blissfully unaware that the nation had moved on to correcting form SF-27b.
I’ll .docx Your Location
Staff Writer
