Hearts Entombed

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He bore her coffin through the mist that wept on weathered stone,
The mourners’ solemn chants rose thin and cold, then perished in the air;
Yet delirium stirred beneath the night—his heart no more his own,
For love’s blind spell took root and thrived within the moon’s frigid stare.

When the crowd withdrew, he lingered ‘neath the angel’s grieving wing,
And murmured vows no soul could hear, eyes alight with dark desire;
The lilies waned, their fragrance fled, while worms began their whispering,
And in his chest a fierce flame rose—to claim his bride from that frozen pyre.

A fortnight hence beneath the stars’ pale spectral glow, he clawed the earth with frantic hands;
The loosened clay exhaled and breathed, as though the grave itself did conspire;
He freed her from the silken veil, and kissed her brow where silence stands,
And felt death’s eternal hush ignite the fever of his heart’s vile fire.

She lay in splendor, ashen grey and still, her shroud a fragile, shimmering veil,
Devouring worms traced her hollow cheeks—mute pilgrims weaving funeral tales;
He sobbed for sin, and brushed her skin, breathed vows no mortal dared to hail,
Till maggots writhed as shadows stirred to witness love through death’s travail.

Her ribs sank low, her hair uncoiled, her lips half-parted, soft with creeping mold,
He leaned within her sweet decay, his soul’s last hope forever disavowed.
But love-defiled earth betrayed the flesh it struggled long and fiercely to uphold,
The angel’s base gave way in grief—its fractured marble groaned aloud.

Then stone fell heavy—upheaved yet resigned—the angel obelisk proclaimed doom,
Its marble wings lay shattered wide, their cry a dirge that mocked the churchyard’s distant hymn;
It crushed them both—lover beguiled and bride enshrined within one tomb,
Now wedded fast in death’s still calm, beneath love’s ruin and its tender balm—
Entombed eternal within Earth’s solemn womb.

The Oak Tree: Silent Sentinel of Time

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Beneath the haunted, blood-tinged dusk, I rose from earthen bed,
And watched as flags of countless kings were trampled, torn, and shredded.
They built their towers, cursed the skies, forged empires of hollow lore,
Then fell like blackened leaves to feed the roots of ancient yore.

The emperors knelt to kiss my bark, then turned their swords on kin;
Their prayers dissolved to smoke and dust, as fate reclaimed their sin.
I heard proud poets whisper lies, I saw the prophets weep,
For truth lay shallow as their graves—and none their sacred vows could keep.

Men etched their passing lives in bark, imploring time to stay,
Yet none withstand the patient frost that gnaws their marks away.
Each season claims another soul, yet still I stand to see
How mortals grasp at frail legacies while the aeons still shelter me.

Now dawn’s first light is veiled in ash, the land a mournful shroud,
The rusted iron monuments dissolve ‘neath weeping, wailing clouds.
They glorified their fleeting gods, chased the void through flame,
Yet wisdom stirs where silence breathes and softly speaks my name.

The wind of ages, griefs endured, and quiet dignity remain
Whispering through my leaves, a hymn steeped in time’s refrain;
To stand as all ambition rots, while earth intones its prayer,
My shadow guards its secrets, shared only with those who dare.

Mankind’s ruins hold me steadfast now, their follies bring me peace,
For in their end my roots find strength, and age grants eternal release.

The Gilded Curse

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From crystal depths the captive spirit wept,
Then broke the seal that bound his soul before,
Where ancient dreams and buried secrets slept,
The Genie rose—a specter carved of ancient lore.

His eyes were flames that danced with mocking fire,
He leaned in close—his voice, a silken snare:
“Speak but one wish, O mortal, your desire,
For once bestowed, no turning back from there.”

“I’ll drown in wealth beyond the dreams of kings,”
I thundered forth, my heart consumed by greed;
“Let emerald fountains burst from jewelled springs,
And let the world kneel low to serve my every need.”

He bowed with grace, the lamp released my wish,
A gilded storm that swallowed night entire;
My vaults o’erflowed—their opulence to flourish,
Yet emptiness consumed my heart’s empire.

Beyond my towers, where famine’s specters plead,
The masses gathered, gaunt and wild with thirst;
Their faces mirrored what my pride decreed,
I barred my gates, secure within my gilded curse.

But hunger’s tide, relentless as the grave,
Devoured the walls that gold and iron frame;
They stormed my keep in fury’s seething wave—
And feasted deep upon my flesh and name.

Now ruins whisper where my kingdom stood,
And ghostly echoes drift through ash and gold;
No song remains of power, pride, or good—
Only my name, by hollow winds my infamy retold.

The Cadaver’s Testament

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Beneath the alabaster sheet I lie,
A vessel void of breath, yet still I cry—
Not through these lips that mortal sleep has sealed,
But through the silent halls where grief’s revealed.

I once was he who trembled at the thought
Of death’s pale chamber where the flesh is brought,
Yet here I rest—the very thing I feared—
While students gather round with faces peered.

They slice with silver blades through skin once warm,
And log each organ, map each fading form—
The heart that beat for love now beats no more,
Lies opened wide, its secrets unsealed evermore.

How strange that I, who sought immortal fame,
Should find eternity without a name—
A numbered specimen, a teaching aid,
While all my grand ambitions turn and fade.

The brain that dreamed of symphonies and art
Now sleeps in jars, dissected, torn apart,
And hands that penned such passionate romance
Are severed now, transfixed in death’s cold trance.

I wanted meaning, purpose, legacy—
Instead I serve the sterile laws of anatomy,
My final act: to educate the young
On death’s mechanics, not the songs I’d sung.

Perhaps there’s poetry in this, though grim:
That I, who feared the reaper’s early call, however slim,
Should give my body freely to the knife,
And teach through death the fragile truth of life.

So let them learn from me what I denied—
That flesh is temporary, and our pride
Dissolves like morning mist at break of day,
While only what we give to others stays.

Beneath the Moon’s Pale Embrace

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‘Neath twilight’s dim and deathly veil,
A skeleton sang soft and sweet—
His ribs were harps the night winds wail,
That played for hearts that ceased to beat.

He sang not for the dawn or day,
But for his bride with vacant eyes,
Who drifted near in ashen gray,
Her breath like whispered lullabies.

“Come dance,” he whispered, arms outstretched wide,
Our waltz shall stir the dead from ancient tombs.
She floated near, his phantom, spectral bride,
Their steps like sighs that haunt abandoned rooms.

Around them stirred the sleeping dead,
The roses blackened, roots decayed,
Yet love, though lost, still softly bled,
A fever fierce through night’s parade.

The ghoul and ghost, the fiend and friend,
Paused, trembling in their pale delight,
To see such hearts refuse their end,
And kindle warmth in endless night.

Her breath, a veil of evening frost,
His heart, a chamber locked and cold;
Their touch, a spark where hope was lost,
As time’s dark tide began to fold.

He swore by stars that do not shine,
Their union none could now undo;
Her echo chilled his trembling spine,
As death reclaimed what life once knew.

The worms withdrew; the nightbird’s cry
Gave voice to graves and whispered lore;
For love, though silent, will not die—
It haunts beyond Death’s shadowed door.

So if you stray where spirits croon,
And moonlight cloaks the earth to rest,
You’ll glimpse two shades beneath the moon—
In death embraced, forever blessed.

And pity not their tender plight,
For hearts like theirs no tomb can keep;
They dance through every haunted night,
And kiss where souls and shadows sleep.

Beneath Prophetic Eyes

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I dreamed before the dawn arrived,
Of souls that screamed yet none survived.
The stars were whispering through the gloom,
Their voices mourned the coming doom.

I told the crowd what death would bring,
They mocked the truth within my sting.
They danced beneath the blazing dome,
Their laughter died where lost souls roam.

Within my blood, I felt the tidal grave,
That surged to claim what none could save.
I cried and pleaded—none replied,
The darkened sea consumed their pride.

A woman wept, her child grew cold,
A vision carved in pain untold.
Her tears were pearls upon my chest,
Each prophecy denied me rest.

For what’s the gift of sight but pain?
To foretell the loss yet speak in vain,
To read the page before it bleeds,
To weep for hearts that fate precedes.

I begged the stars to cease their hymn,
To let the dreadful visions dim.
But their silence only mocked my fear,
And whispered fates I dared not hear.

They chained me in the village square,
For sorcery, for dark despair.
Yet still I saw through faith’s deceit,
The flame that rose to their defeat.

Now through the keyhole, night peers in,
It grins, recalling what has been.
To know the end, before one dies—
Is hell beneath prophetic eyes.

Collapse, Authoritarianism, and Overpopulation: Lessons from Goliath’s Curse

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Introduction

Luke Kemp’s Goliath’s Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse provides one of the most thorough and data-driven analyses of the factors leading to the downfall of powerful societies throughout history. Kemp argues that industrial civilization is uniquely vulnerable to collapse due to structural fragility, elite capture, environmental overshoot, and inequality, and highlights the role of overpopulation and authoritarianism in this process. This essay will synthesize the book’s core arguments, assess their realism using contemporary research, explore major historical case studies, analyze policy implications, and offer best- and worst-case scenarios for the future.


Realism of Kemp’s Projections

Kemp’s thesis draws on 324 historical case studies and massive datasets to demonstrate that collapse is rarely the result of just one failure. Instead, accumulation of inequality, elite overreach, dwindling resources, and the immiseration of the masses are consistent precursors. Contemporary researchers validate this viewpoint: the globalized, interdependent world—where economic, military, and technological complexity converge—exhibits even greater structural fragility due to networked dependencies and systemic risks.​

Critically, Kemp’s emphasis on inequality resonates with both ancient and modern collapse research. Societies from Rome to the Maya suffered fragmentation when the benefits of growth became concentrated in elites, leaving the majority disenfranchised and impoverished. Modern industrial society magnifies this problem, as wealth gaps have reached historic highs and political polarization erodes legitimacy, directly reflecting the book’s warnings. However, before projecting certainty, it is important to acknowledge that many historic collapses occurred in less interconnected worlds. The global scale of today’s civilization means any collapse will affect all regions, not just local populations.​


Overpopulation: Catalyst and Effect

While population pressures have always affected collapse dynamics, today’s challenges are unprecedented. UN projections suggest the global population may peak at around 10.3 billion by the 2080s, although some research predicts an earlier plateau and possible decline as fertility drops. Kemp argues that high population density fosters resource scarcity, urban stress, political volatility, and environmental destruction—wickedly amplifying the curse of complex, hierarchical societies.​

Historical studies show overpopulation has often accelerated collapse. For instance, in the late Bronze Age, excessive population and resource consumption strained food and energy supplies, hastening the demise of empires. Modern parallels can be found in urban over-crowding, food insecurity, and the strain on water and ecosystems. Overpopulation makes effective governance harder, drives demand for authoritarian solutions, and can both trigger and intensify post-collapse crises.​


Major Global Population Correction

Although catastrophic population corrections have occurred in the past (e.g., the Black Death, colonial epidemics), projections for the 21st century vary. Some experts warn of mass die-offs from climate-induced crop failures, pandemics, and conflict—especially if collapse is abrupt and poorly managed. Others predict that population will decline gradually as fertility rates fall globally, initiated by socioeconomic shifts rather than mass mortality. A rapid correction is less likely unless environmental or political shocks become overwhelming, but historical precedent suggests such events cannot be ruled out.​


Who Will Survive?

Patterns from past collapses indicate that groups and regions with high social cohesion, local resource security, and flexible, inclusive institutions have higher survival prospects. Democratic, egalitarian communities tend to rebuild faster and maintain order. Authoritarian systems, while able to mobilize resources during crises, are more fragile over the long term due to lack of legitimacy and elite infighting. Kemp’s studies of Roman and Han China illustrate that social fragmentation and internal division often prove fatal, while resilience stems from adaptive, decentralized networks.​

Survival will depend on:

  • Geographic luck: regions less affected by climate change or disaster.

  • Social capital: communities with strong local networks and trust.

  • Adaptability: ability to shift production, resource use, and governance.


Major Environmental Challenges

Environmental challenges are both causes and results of collapse. Kemp and contemporary research highlight several urgent threats:

  • Resource Depletion: Water, soil, and fossil fuels are already under critical pressure. Ecological overshoot leads directly to collapse.​

  • Climate Change: Droughts, floods, and extreme weather events disrupt agriculture and settlements.​

  • Biodiversity Loss: Disruption of ecosystems threatens food security and stability.

  • Pollution: Urban and industrial stress increases disease and health problems, reduces resilience.​

These problems often compound, creating feedback loops—such as crop failure driving social unrest, leading to political collapse, which in turn worsens environmental management.​


Case Studies from the Book

Cahokia

The city of Cahokia, rising near the Mississippi River over 1,000 years ago, was North America’s first true city but exemplifies what Kemp calls the “curse of Goliath.” Agricultural surplus fueled rapid population growth and a stratified priestly elite, who relied on human sacrifice and oppression to maintain control. Eventually, resource depletion and social stress led to abandonment. Within a century, its population halved, and its urban experiment was never revived—demonstrating how centralized power and inequality, amid environmental strain, precipitate terminal collapse.​

Rome and Han China

Both empires fell after long periods of elite domination, expansion, and bureaucracy, suffering diminishing returns on complexity and resource management. While Rome’s aftermath was fragmentation, the legacy persisted through democratic innovation, relative to Cahokia’s oblivion. Han China’s collapse was rapid, but the culture and institutions endured through adaptation and decentralized networks. Kemp uses these to illustrate how collapse varies: authoritarian, hierarchical societies are more vulnerable, but cultural resilience and inclusive institutions can mitigate suffering.​

Colonialism and the Black Death

Colonization involved demographic collapse for indigenous populations, yet fueled expansion and technological innovation among colonizers. The Black Death killed one-third to one-half of Europe’s population, but survivors experienced a redistribution of wealth, rising wages, egalitarian gains, and health improvements—demonstrating that collapse, under specific conditions, can benefit the majority, especially with inclusive social structures.​


Policy Implications for Avoiding or Mitigating Collapse

Kemp and associated studies argue that conscious, systemic reform is essential to avoid collapse and mitigate its effects.​

  • Redistribute Power and Wealth: Tackle inequality with progressive taxation, strengthened welfare, and inclusive governance. Avoid elite capture.

  • Build Societal Resilience: Decentralize decision-making, invest in local food, water, and energy systems, and strengthen social networks.

  • Educate and Adapt: Promote ecological literacy, adaptive skills, and creative problem solving to prepare transitional generations for changed realities.​

  • International Cooperation: Develop new global governance structures to address climate, migration, conflict, and technology risks.

  • Limit Dangerous Technologies: Regulate AI, biotech, and nuclear weapons to avoid existential threats.

Kemp warns that technical solutions alone are insufficient; true change means reforming institutions and cultural attitudes to power, competition, and resource use.​


Best-Case Scenario

The best-case future involves a deliberate transition away from extractive, hierarchical systems toward decentralized, inclusive, and sustainable models. Population stabilizes and gradually declines due to voluntary changes, not disaster. An international movement toward ecological stewardship, equity, and resilience reforms global governance to address environmental challenges proactively. Collapse, if it occurs, is mitigated by adaptive networks—survivors experience greater freedom and equality, echoing post-Black Death Europe.​

  • Widespread adoption of renewable energy and sustainable practices.

  • Inclusive governance and participatory policymaking.

  • Strong global cooperation on climate, health, and migration.

  • Communities empowered to manage local resources and recovery.

  • Education and cultural change fostering adaptability and resilience.


Worst-Case Scenario

The worst-case scenario is a rapid, cascading collapse driven by unchecked overpopulation, ecological overshoot, mass poverty, and authoritarian retrenchment. Resource wars, famines, pandemics, and political breakdown drive mass mortality. Survivors form small, isolated groups, constantly threatened by violence, scarcity, and environmental devastation. Authoritarian regimes seize power, but their fragility delivers only short-lived, brutal order. Cultural and technological regression is widespread, and recovery takes centuries, if at all.​

  • Abrupt population collapse due to disaster, conflict, and disease.

  • Breakdown of central authority—rise of local warlords and fragmentation.

  • Environmental devastation worsened by abandoned infrastructure.

  • Widespread suffering, loss of cultural and technological knowledge.

  • Long-term decline for most survivors, unless new inclusive models can be rebuilt.


Conclusion

Goliath’s Curse offers a profound and empirically supported warning for modern civilization: elite-dominated hierarchies and overpopulation render societies fragile, and collapse is not only possible but historically frequent. Case studies show that collapse need not mean universal disaster, but the difference lies in inclusiveness, adaptability, and resource equity. The best hope for humanity is a conscious, collective pivot toward resilience, cooperation, and sustainability—without which, the worst excesses of collapse may be upon us sooner than expected.

Based on the synthesis of recent history, human psychology, and the latest global data, the most likely trajectory for industrial civilization is a period of escalating instability and decline, rather than a sudden, total collapse. The world is already experiencing the early stages of this process: resource depletion, peaking food production, persistent pollution, and the intensification of climate change are converging with rising inequality, political polarization, and the erosion of democratic norms. Human psychology—particularly the tendency to delay action until crises are undeniable, the allure of authoritarian solutions in times of fear, and the inertia of entrenched interests—suggests that meaningful, coordinated reform will be slow and uneven.​

Environmental degradation is the most critical and non-negotiable constraint. As ecosystems unravel, food and water insecurity will increase, driving migration, conflict, and further political instability. The global economy will likely enter a prolonged period of “degrowth,” whether managed or chaotic, as the limits of resource extraction and pollution sinks are reached. Technological innovation may delay some impacts, but cannot substitute for the foundational services provided by a stable biosphere.​

A major global population correction is probable within this century, driven not only by declining fertility but also by rising mortality from environmental and social stressors. The survivors will be those communities and regions that foster social cohesion, adaptability, and local resource security. Authoritarian regimes may rise in the short term, but their inherent fragility and lack of legitimacy make them poor candidates for long-term stability. The best-case scenario remains possible—a managed transition to a smaller, more equitable, and sustainable global society—but this will require unprecedented levels of cooperation, foresight, and institutional reform.

In sum, the coming decades will test the resilience and wisdom of humanity as never before. The window for proactive, collective action is rapidly closing. If current trends continue, the world will face a future marked by hardship, fragmentation, and loss—but also by the possibility of renewal, if the lessons of history and the warnings of science are finally heeded.


AMA Announcement: Dr. Luke Kemp, author of Goliath’s Curse – The History and Future of Societal Collapse, will be joining Reddit for a live AMA on Tuesday, October 14th, 2025 at 11AM EST in the r/collapse community. Dr. Kemp, an honorary lecturer in environmental policy at the Australian National University and a research affiliate at the Centre for the Study of Existential Risk at the University of Cambridge, brings deep expertise in environmental, economic, and geopolitical risks. He has advised major institutions such as the WHO and the UN and has been featured in The New York Times, the BBC, and The New Yorker. If you’re interested in the future of civilization, collapse, and related topics, this is a unique opportunity to engage directly with the author. More details and timezone conversion can be found at the official announcement link.


References:

  1. Carrington, Damian. “Goliath’s Curse.” The Guardian. August 2025. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/aug/02/self-termination-history-and-future-of-societal-collapse

  2. Donald, Rachel. “Collapse for the 99% | Luke Kemp – by Rachel Donald.” Planet: Critical. August 27, 2025. https://www.planetcritical.com/p/luke-kemp

  3. Dahl, Arthur. “Societal Collapse.” International Environment Forum. August 2025. https://iefworld.org/node/1756

  4. Diamond, Jared. Collapse: How Societies Choose to Fail or Succeed. Viking, 2005.

  5. Homer-Dixon, Thomas. The Upside of Down: Catastrophe, Creativity, and the Renewal of Civilization. Island Press, 2008. https://islandpress.org/books/upside-down

  6. Kemp, Luke. Goliath’s Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse. Viking, 2025. https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/219301731-goliath-s-curse

  7. Lynch, Andrew. “Goliath’s Curse: Powerful if uneven portrait of societal collapse sings the praises of Irish Citizens.” Irish Times. August 2025. https://www.irishtimes.com/culture/books/2025/08/05/goliaths-curse-powerful-if-uneven-portrait-of-societal-collapse-sings-the-praises-of-irish-citizens-assembly/

  8. Simon, Ed. “Are We Headed for Apocalypse? This Book Says It’s a 1-in-3 Chance.” The New York Times. October 2, 2025. https://www.nytimes.com/2025/10/02/books/review/luke-kemp-goliaths-curse.html

  9. Scheffer, Marten, et al. “The vulnerability of aging states: A survival analysis across premodern societies.” 2023. https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.2218834120

  10. Tainter, Joseph. The Collapse of Complex Societies. Cambridge University Press, 1988.

  11. Turchin, Peter. End Times: Elites, Counter-Elites, and the Path of Political Disintegration. Penguin, 2023.

  12. BBC Future. “Are we on the road to civilisation collapse?” BBC. February 18, 2019. https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20190218-are-we-on-the-road-to-civilisation-collapse

  13. United Nations Population Division. “World Population Prospects 2024.” https://population.un.org/wpp/

  14. Earth.Org. “15 Biggest Environmental Problems of 2025.” January 19, 2025. https://earth.org/the-biggest-environmental-problems-of-our-lifetime/

  15. Berman, Art. “Goliath’s Curse: Bold Claims and Hidden Traps.” September 30, 2025. https://www.artberman.com/blog/goliaths-curse-bold-claims-and-hidden-traps/

  16. The Economist. “Humanity will shrink, far sooner than you think.” September 11, 2025. https://www.economist.com/interactive/briefing/2025/09/11/humanity-will-shrink-far-sooner-than-you-think

  17. MAHB. “Overpopulation and the Collapse of Civilization.” November 5, 2013. https://mahb.stanford.edu/blog/overpopulation-and-the-collapse-of-civilization/

  18. Middle Way Society. “Goliath’s Curse: The History and Future of Societal Collapse.” October 8, 2025. https://www.middlewaysociety.org/goliaths-curse-the-history-and-future-of-societal-collapse/

  19. Journals. “Can a collapse of global civilization be avoided?” Royal Society Publishing. March 7, 2013. https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rspb.2012.2845

  20. EarthArXiv. “Human Civilization will Collapse (High Confidence).” January 6, 2025. https://eartharxiv.org/repository/view/6520/

  21. PMC. “Societal Collapse and Intergenerational Disparities in Suffering.” August 27, 2022. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9419136/

The True Face of False Piety

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They claim the title, Heaven’s chosen race,
Yet twist the sacred threads of scripture’s lore;
They mask their shame in manufactured grace,
And reap the anguish their hollow heart’s bore.

The Bible they brandish like a sharpened sword,
Yet trample mercy, mock the meek and poor.
Once outcasts loved by the Lord of lords,
Now stain His name in their unholy war.

Megadonors bankroll their holy fight,
To feed the hunger of devouring greed,
They preach salvation with rifles held tight,
Fueling a white dream sprung from hatred’s seed.

They build their walls against every stranger’s face,
Masking venom with prayers no ear shall heed;
The feast Christ gave for all the human race
Now seats the few, while countless souls lie bleeding.

They clutch the cross to vindicate their hate,
Cry hollow words with cold, self-righteous pride,
Then seal their brother’s dark and bitter fate,
For love’s true path they cruelly cast aside.

If Christ should walk these streets today,
Zealots in false piety still standing tall,
Would drag Him far from His humble way,
And nail Him once again to their judgment wall.

The Thinker’s Burden

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What thoughts assail the bronze-cast mind,
That bears the fate of humankind?
He contemplates our brilliant fall,
The hubris that will doom us all.

He ponders man’s ingenious hand,
That carved cathedrals, subdued the land,
Yet could not curb its vaunted pride,
Or sense the faultlines deep inside.

What good is genius yoked to hollow dreams,
That mapped the stars yet missed the planet’s screams?
They shattered atoms, traced the genome’s code,
But could not heal wounds that progress sowed.

What hand unsealed creation’s core,
But left the world more scarred than before?
What intellect designed machines,
Then ravaged forests, poisoned streams?

The Thinker knows what we denied:
That knowledge without wisdom died,
That brilliance freed from all constraint,
Would scorch the very dream it painted.

He wonders if we’ll ever see,
Before the final elegy,
That all our science, all our art,
Were orphaned works without the heart.

His meditation has no end,
No revelation to descend—
For he has glimpsed the destiny we wrought,
We held the key to Eden’s gate, then broke the sacred knot.

He rests in silence, eternally cast,
And mourns the tales from ages past,
Of minds endowed with reason’s flame,
That dug their crypts in progress’ name.

The answer that he seeks in vain:
Could humankind outwit its brain—
Or has the seed of ruin grown,
Too deeply planted, darkly sown?

The Silence We Chose

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It wasn’t tanks or bullets on the street,
No boot heels drumming in a steady beat—
Just morning news that played like any other,
A husband kissing children, then his mother.
While orders were carried out from a distant command,
Like a noose tightening by some invisible hand.

My neighbor waved and trimmed his manicured lawn,
The coffee tasted warm, the day’s routine moved on.
But something in the air had turned to lead,
A weight of truths left carefully unsaid.
The phones still worked, the lights burned throughout the night,
Yet the public’s voice now trembled with subdued fright.

They didn’t need to storm the castle gate—
We handed them the keys, then called it fate.
We bartered liberty for comfort that enslaves,
While they silenced those defiant and truly brave.
The moment wasn’t fire, nor the storm’s swift flood,
But silent acceptance that froze my American blood.

I looked around and saw the stark truth at last:
The future was a copy of the distant past,
Where critical thought was quietly stifled and undone,
Where every face denied the darkness had ever begun.
It wasn’t revolution’s crimson stain—
Just waking up to find freedom bound in chains.

The worst part? How the sun still rose each day,
And how we embraced the new imprisoned way.