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2025 on Tumblr: Trends That Defined the Year
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YOU ARE THE REASON
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@msegemini
perpsective we need
A powerful reflection on identity, love, justice, and leadership — challenging stereotypes, calling out hypocrisy, and urging empathy and courage in a fractured world. #HumanRights #Justice #Leadership #LoveIsLove #Feminism #JusticeMatters #Accountability #Empathy #Equality #EndDiscrimination #GlobalJustice
‘DE’ is a poem about the shadowy power of the prefix ‘DE’—how it can erode identity, justify harm, and destabilize, yet also hold hope through peace and healing. A reflection on language’s impact on humanity and conflict. Text of a reflective poem titled 'DE' exploring the dual nature of the prefix 'DE'—its power to harm through demoralizing and destabilizing, and its potential to heal through demilitarizing and detoxifying.
Remembrance is remembrance- not a violation. This poem is about the recent decision made by the @IOC in relation to @Heraskevychs' helmet showing the fallen Ukrainian athletes in this year's winter @Olympics. The @olympic_team_ukraine deserve more respect.
#UkraineOlympicTeam #Olympics2026 #IOC #StandWithUkraine #UnityInSport #AthletesForPeace #TogetherStronger
Universality means human rights belong to everyone, everywhere, without exception.
When rights are denied to one, they are weakened for all.
(Poetic text titled “Article 2.2: Universality” discussing human rights as equal, indivisible, and belonging to all people regardless of identity, borders, wealth, or power.)
Mortality reminds us that life is finite. Violence distorts humanity. Causing harm is fundamentally wrong use our time. We're different in countless ways, yet bound by one truth: we're human not immortals.
A poem reflecting on human mortality and morality, stating that life is finite and shared by all people regardless of race, gender, religion, ability, or background. The text argues that violence and war corrupt humanity, and that limited human life should be spent sustaining life, love, truth, and dignity rather than causing harm.
Article 1: 1.6 What Defines “Human” Capacity for harm
Care and harm come from the same human brain.
This piece explores how harm once served survival, how modern systems now amplify it, and why understanding the roots of harm must never erase accountability or the reality of victims’ pain. A poem titled “What Defines Human: Capacity for Harm” explores how harm and care evolved together in humans, how modern culture and digital spaces amplify harmful behavior, and why understanding the roots of harm must not excuse perpetrators or erase the lasting impact on victims.
Article 1: Capacity for Care
To be human is not only to think, but to care. Care sustains law, love, community, and survival itself. Without care, humanity collapses. A poem titled “Article 1: Capacity for Care” reflecting on empathy, moral responsibility, mental capacity, and the role of care in sustaining humanity, law, and justice.
Article 1: 1.2 What Defines “Human” Consciousness Article 1.2: Consciousness — the capacity for awareness, agency, and moral discernment. On this ground stand our rights. Poem page titled Article 1: 1.2 What Defines “Human” — Consciousness. Verses describe consciousness as awareness and self-control, dependent on neural networks and learning, able to perceive right and wrong, and to create art, language, culture, and new life.
Article 1: What Defines ‘Human’ – Existence. A reflection on what it means to exist as human. Our shared lineage, our differences, our needs, our rights. Human existence is not conditional. It is bound to human rights.
Image of a poem titled “Article 1: What Defines ‘Human’ – Existence.” The poem reflects on shared human ancestry, consciousness, culture, basic needs, and the idea that human existence is inseparably linked to human rights.
Human Rights – 2026. Article 2: What Defines Human 'rights'. What defines a human right? Not power. Not borders. Not permission. But safety. Voice. Dignity. This poem returns human rights to their simplest form: the right to live, speak, exist, and sleep without fear. A reminder that rights are not privileges handed down by governments, but truths carried in the human body itself. A poem titled “Human Rights – 2026. Article 2: What Defines Human ‘Rights’”. The text lists fundamental human rights including the right to live, speak, work humanely, feel safe from violence, express culture and language, and live without fear of oppression, corruption, or control. The poem emphasizes dignity, safety, and freedom as universal human rights.
Human Rights – 2025. Article 1: What Defines ‘Human’
If we can speak, feel, learn, remember, choose then we can be held accountable.
A political poem criticizing Donald Trump for spreading disinformation about medicine, climate change, the economy, Europe, Ukraine, and authoritarian regimes. The poem contrasts expertise, education, and law with misinformation and abuse of power.
A poem about empire, ego, and the lie that bigger always means better.
Humour as a hook, history as a mirror, and a reminder that real strength starts inward — not outward.
#PoliticalPoetry #AntiImperialism #PowerAndEgo #HealingBeforeHarm #CriticalThinking Image of a poem critiquing American imperialism, ego-driven leadership, and expansionist power. The poem uses British colloquial language and humour, then shifts into a reflective message about self-healing, self-acceptance, and how unhealed insecurity can lead to tearing the world apart.
A poem against antisemitism, religious hatred, and false certainty. A reminder that belief is human, history is real, and peace begins with letting others exist, pray, and live without fear.
#Poetry #Antisemitism #ReligiousFreedom #HumanRights #NeverForget #Peace #FaithAndHumanity A free-verse poem condemning antisemitism and religious hatred. The speaker calls for respect of Jewish prayer and belief, references the Holocaust, and argues for humility around religion and truth. The poem reflects on how beliefs are human-made, historically limited, and urges acceptance, peace, and open-mindedness toward others.