A Bengali woman carrying a British merchant on her back…
📸 This photo was taken in 1903, at the height of British colonialism in the Indian subcontinent. This isn't just a picture…
it's a slap in the face to all those who sing the praises of "Western civilization." This is the true face of colonialism, which they still try to beautify in history books.
It's slavery and the humiliation of human beings, the crushing of human dignity, simply because they don't belong to the white race! And then they ask you about terrorism…
The history of Western colonialism is full of massacres, slavery, plunder, and starvation… But they reduce terrorism to oppressed peoples struggling for their dignity! 🩸
The effects of what British colonialism did in India—the killing, starvation, plunder, and contempt for humanity—are still evident today. Millions
were killed, wealth was stolen, and generations were displaced… all under the banner of a false "enlightenment"!
This isn’t a toy.
It’s a cluster bomb.
Israel is dropping cluster bombs shaped like small footballs across South Lebanon — designed to attract children before they tear them apart.
This is a war crime.
And yet, not a peep from the complicit international community, of course.
An elephant noticed a baby hippo dangerously close to the water and started protecting it from crocodiles.
Then the mom hippo arrived and scolded her for being irresponsible! ❤️ ❤️
We’ve destroyed 75% of Earth’s ice-free land and wiped out 73% of monitored wildlife populations since 1970.
Habitat loss is now the leading threat to 85% of endangered species.
For most of human history, wildlife shaped ecosystems. Now humanity shapes nearly all of them.
Forests become farmland, wetlands become cities, and grasslands become roads.
Every time a habitat disappears, thousands of relationships vanish with it. Surviving species are left in smaller, more isolated fragments of the world they evolved to live in.
Biodiversity loss is one of the largest transformations of life on Earth already underway.
Where do species go when their habitats disappear at this scale?
This man repeatedly HIT & YANKED the horse who collapsed in NYC.
This isn't an isolated incident.
It will only end when everyone STOPS using horses as transportation 😡
Nepal bans Indian mangoes
Kathmandu's Ministry of Agriculture and Livestock Development has imposed a complete import ban on Indian mangoes, enforced since April-May at quarantine checkpoints
Excessive chemical pesticide residues were detected in imported consignments. Nepal joins Japan, the EU, and Saudi Arabia in rejecting Indian agri exports over food safety failures
Once believed to be on the brink of extinction, the Southern White Rhino has made one of the greatest wildlife comebacks in history. From fewer than 100 individuals in the early 1900s, dedicated conservation efforts helped the population recover to more than 16,000 today. 🌍 🦏
🚨 Illegal & cruel animal transport
Gross violation of the PCA Act & Transport of Animals Rules. Multiple buffaloes were crammed into an unsafe, illegal double-decker modification, causing severe distress and risking injury.
Vehicle: Mahindra Pickup
Reg No: RJ09GE3652
Requesting immediate action against the vehicle owner or driver and rescue of the buffaloes!! @PoliceRajasthan@RajCMO@RajGovOfficial@Dept_of_AHD
Eagles make history with weird tradition. Scientists are buzzing after a set of trail camera images appeared to show something researchers almost never expected to document in the wild: bald eagles passing down a learned behavior. Last year, cameras captured a massive bull moose traveling through the forest with two adult eagles perched calmly on his antlers, riding for miles as if it was normal. At first, experts thought it was just a bizarre one-time moment, but after reviewing months of footage, they noticed the same pair returning again and again. The strange relationship seemed to help both sides. The eagles scared off insects and smaller scavengers bothering the moose, while the moose gave them a moving lookout tower through thick summer brush.
But the image that shocked everyone came nearly two years later. The same moose was seen walking toward the camera, only this time there were three eagles on his antlers: the two adults and their now-grown juvenile standing between them. Researchers believe the young eagle may have learned the behavior by watching its parents, a discovery that could suggest these birds are capable of recognizing patterns, remembering useful partnerships, and passing habits down in a way scientists rarely associate with wild raptors. What started as one strange trail camera photo has now become something much bigger, a possible glimpse into how much more is happening in the animal world when nobody is watching.
🇫🇷🐝 France became a global leader in pollinator protection by restricting pesticides linked to bee decline. As bees pollinate many of the crops that feed the world, their survival remains a critical environmental issue. 🌻🌍
Reference Sites
https://t.co/rmEU7fYPji
Así es la esclavitud en las minas en el este del Congo, de donde sale más del 70% del cobalto del mundo, miles de esclavos diariamente extraen el mineral por apenas 2$ al dia para llenar los bolsillos a las multinacionales capitalistas.
El capitalismo que no te enseñan, así es como se sostiene el nivel de vida y de consumo en Occidente, en estas minas al menos hay 40.000 niños esclavizados que pican piedra para que Apple saque 4 modelos de Iphone cada año.
A window into 19th-century Turkmen culture: Yomut women of Krasnovodsk wearing the magnificent Kasaba, where every ornament told a story of identity, heritage, and status.
References
https://t.co/RZaGSHiM2B
In many traditions, the bond between people, animals, and the earth is sacred. The horse, the fire, and the land are not separate—they are part of a shared existence built on trust, balance, and respect. These teachings pass from generation to generation,