Yes, it definitely does sound very familiar.
You can’t quiet cut me. I already quiet quit.
To be honest, I never liked this term, as it misrepresents what people are actually doing. They say when people only do what their job requires, and nothing more, it's "quiet quitting". Ok, Mr Man, you have a problem with that? Require your employees to do more and compensate them accordingly.
I actually know a guy, who literally quiet quit his job, meaning he just stopped working. Not showing up at the office. Not logging in from home. Not replying to any emails. His co-workers have no idea where he is or what his plans are, but it's been going for over 2 months, and he's still employed (not AT&T), and still getting his paychecks. And yes, he's ok, he's posting from clubs and parties on social media every weekend. Just doesn't feel like working anymore, and probably waiting to see how long he can milk his company before they finally fire him. I know it's nothing new, even the Office Space reference in the first reply brings up good memories, but I wonder how much of this is actually going on these days.