Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Humans.
The Counter of the Dead: How a Small-Town Pharmacist Saw the Opioid Apocalypse Coming When Everyone Else Looked Away
The harrowing true story of the rural pharmacists who tried to warn America about the opioid crisis years before it became a national headline, and the systemic failure that silenced them.
By Frank Massey 14 days ago in Humans
Woman Shot in Minneapolis Leaves a City Searching for Answers
The news reached people quietly at first, then all at once. A woman shot in Minneapolis during a federal operation. At first, it sounded like another brief headline in a country used to tragedy. But as details emerged, the weight of it settled in. This was not just about a single moment of violence. It was about fear spilling into everyday life. It was about trust already stretched thin and now pulled even tighter. Minneapolis is a city that knows grief too well, and this incident reopened wounds many hoped were healing. To understand why this matters, we must look beyond the act itself and into the lives, systems, and emotions tied to it.
By Muqadas khan14 days ago in Humans
When International Relations Shape the World We Live In
When International Relations Shape the World We Live In International relations are not limited to world leaders shaking hands at summits or exchanging sharp words on television. They represent a complex system of interactions that quietly shape economies, security, culture, and the daily lives of people across the globe. Every treaty signed, every sanction imposed, and even every diplomatic silence carries consequences that often reach far beyond borders.
By Wings of Time 14 days ago in Humans
Empaths Don’t Need Thicker Skin, They Need Better Boundaries
Being an empath is often treated like a badge of honor. You’re the one people turn to when they’re overwhelmed, confused, or hurting. You listen deeply, sense emotional shifts instantly, and care in ways that feel natural and instinctive. But over time, that constant emotional openness can come at a cost.
By Leigh Cala-or14 days ago in Humans
Social Media Causing the Decline in Humanity?
From the moment we wake up to the moment we fall asleep, many of us are glued to screens filled with social feeds, infinite scrolls, and algorithmic suggestions tailored to grab — and keep — our attention. While social media promised connection, empowerment, and community, it’s increasingly clear that its **cost to our mental health, social cohesion, and emotional well-being is profound.** Unless we confront these issues head-on, we risk a generational decline in humanity’s psychological and interpersonal health.
By Anthony Bahamonde14 days ago in Humans
AI the New Wave of Networking
Networking has always been about building relationships—but the way we network has changed dramatically. Gone are the days when success depended solely on attending events, handing out business cards, and hoping someone remembers your name. Today, digital platforms, global communities, and constant online interaction have transformed how connections are made.
By Anthony Bahamonde14 days ago in Humans
Ugh! This Again
Ugh! This Again Good riddance 2025. The holidays and big spending are through. Time to pay debt off and save a little something. But wait! Every channel on the television is pandering for rent type of donations. A commitment. And I don’t even get a ring on it.
By Alexandra Grant15 days ago in Humans
Minneapolis Shooting and the Long Shadow It Leaves on a City
Some events do not end when the sirens fade. They linger in conversations, in empty streets, and in the way people look at one another afterward. A Minneapolis shooting is never just a breaking news alert. It becomes part of the city’s emotional landscape. Families wait for phone calls. Neighbors replay sounds they wish they could forget. Strangers hold doors a little longer, sensing a shared loss they cannot name. Minneapolis is a city shaped by resilience, but each act of violence leaves a quiet mark. This article looks beyond headlines to understand what a Minneapolis shooting means for those who live there, how communities respond, and why healing takes far longer than attention spans allow.
By Muqadas khan15 days ago in Humans
What American People Learn While Traveling And Meeting New People
As the American people move across the world and encounter other people, they take a ride that extends well beyond the geographical boundaries. Every place is turned into a living classroom where you do not learn by reading lectures and reading books, but by talking, living and being connected to others. Traveling makes the world a learning world as each individual we meet provides a fresh insight into this life, culture and identity.
By Tiana Alexandra15 days ago in Humans
Why American People Traveling Helps Meet New People Worldwide Today
Travel in the modern context of American people does not simply mean getting to new places and getting experience to keep it in memory and media. It has become one of the most strong means of communicating with other people regardless of their cultures, languages and ways of life. The need to have real human interaction has been emphasized in the era whereby everybody is digitally connected yet is not emotionally connected. Travel provides what the screens deny: collective time, impromptu dialogue, and the opportunity to interact with individuals without the signature identities.
By Tiana Alexandra15 days ago in Humans








