social media
Social Media for modern lovers in the digital age.
The Phone that Never Rang
In a very fast city in England there lived a man named David David was a young man who was very successful in the digital world he was always on his phone and he had thousands of followers on social media he thought that he was very connected to the world because he knew what everyone was eating and where everyone was traveling he was living in a golden cage of likes and comments he thought he was happy but deep inside he felt very lonely
By Hazrat Umer6 days ago in Humans
Nothing Matters More
I love the hypocrisy of the progressive woman today. They taut liberation and freedom to be whatever we want to be, after all, we fought for those rights and privileges, but then, they crucify any of us who then choose to stay home, to be wives and mothers. Why are my choices less important or rejected as ridiculous? Why are we made to look like we are simply ignorant or uneducated, because we made a life decision, that they don’t agree with? I sometimes wonder about this.
By Alexandra Grant7 days ago in Humans
When Institutions Reward the Disordered
The claim that modern society has “gone insane” circulates constantly in political commentary. The phrase is crude. The frustration behind it is real. When citizens watch institutions make decisions that appear detached from ordinary human consequences, people begin searching for explanations. Some assume incompetence. Others assume corruption. A smaller but growing group points to a psychological explanation known as political ponerology.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin7 days ago in Humans
The AI Trap: Why Building an App in 2 Hours Won’t Let You Quit Your Job
It was 11:45 PM on a Tuesday when my phone lit up. The caller ID showed Tarek, a buddy I’ve known since our college days. Tarek is a senior front-end developer at a mid-sized tech company, the kind of guy who is usually asleep by 10 PM because his brain is fried from endless Jira tickets and pointless zoom meetings.
By John Arthor8 days ago in Humans
A Different Kind of Freedom: Reflections on Women’s Day
Every year on the 8th of March, the world fills with slogans about women. Social media lights up with bright posters, companies post polished messages, and speeches echo the same familiar phrase: “Celebrate women’s freedom.”
By Aarsh Malik8 days ago in Humans
Deep Love Quotes That Will Melt Your Heart
Love is the most profound emotion, capable of transforming hearts and souls. It is the language of the soul, whispered in glances, spoken through touch, and felt deeply in every beat of the heart. Here are some deep love quotes that capture the essence of this timeless emotion, each one crafted to resonate with your heart and stir your soul.
By Ahmed aldeabella8 days ago in Humans
Which Is Worse: Spreading Gossip or Listening to Gossip?
Gossip: Definition Gossip is talking unnecessarily about the personal business or private affairs of others, including one's own family and friends. Most of the time, gossip is a rumor that could ruin someone's reputation. The intent of gossip is to make someone look bad.
By Margaret Minnicks8 days ago in Humans
What to Do When Your Loved One Starts Dating a Chatbot
In the early days of AI, most chatbots had a cool, businesslike tone that discouraged personal relationships. However, as the technology became increasingly personalized and sycophantic, users started relying on AI to feed into their delusions, praise their behavior and even roleplay as a romantic partner, leading to a boom of AI relationships that have sparked a global debate about loneliness, sentience and personal freedom.
By Kaitlin Shanks9 days ago in Humans
Jesse Jackson: The Voice That Refused to Be Silenced
Long before Jesse Jackson stood on national stages, long before he electrified crowds with the thunder of his voice, he was a boy standing on the wrong side of a segregated street—watching a world that told him he did not belong. That early contradiction, the distance between who he was and who he was told he could be, became the fire that shaped one of the most influential civil rights leaders of the 20th century.
By Haroon Pasha9 days ago in Humans
Practice vs Performance
One of the quiet pressures shaping modern communication is the assumption that anything written should be immediately shareable. Drafts blur into declarations, and exploration is mistaken for conclusion. Under this pressure, writing becomes performative by default. The moment words are placed on a page, they are treated as finished statements rather than steps in a process. This expectation distorts both how writing is produced and how it is received, collapsing practice into performance and leaving little room for genuine development.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast10 days ago in Humans






