
Dr. Mozelle Martin
Bio
Behavioral analyst and investigative writer examining how people, institutions, and narratives behave under pressure—and what remains when systems fail.
Stories (135)
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The Squirrel Mirror:
Humans love the idea of animals behaving nobly. The image of a squirrel cradling a tiny pink newborn seems to confirm our deepest hope—that love and care transcend instinct, species, and bloodlines. Social media amplifies this comforting myth with the same captioned claim: “Squirrels will adopt another squirrel baby if its parents die or can’t care for them.” It’s sweet, shareable, and slightly anthropomorphic.
By Dr. Mozelle Martina day ago in Earth
The Fast Pick Problem
The meet-and-greet lasts about 12 minutes. A volunteer opens the door and brings in 2 dogs. One heads straight for the family, tail moving hard, body loose, climbing halfway into a lap before the adults have even settled into their chairs. Everybody laughs. The kids light up. Somebody says, “Well, I guess we know who picked us.”
By Dr. Mozelle Martin2 days ago in Petlife
The Disappearing Art of Self-Respect
There is a discussion most people avoid because the minute it begins, the room usually splits into two (2) shallow camps. One side insists clothing carries no social meaning and should never be interpreted. The other treats any discussion of self-presentation as moral panic wearing respectable clothes.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin6 days ago in Families
Why Animals Entered Empty Cities:
In 2020, cities did not become wild. They became quiet enough for wildlife to take different risks. Traffic dropped. Foot traffic faded. Public spaces lost the noise and motion that usually keep animals at the edge. Then came the images people remember: deer in roadways, coyotes in urban corridors, goats moving through town, boar entering city zones they normally avoided. Many people called it nature reclaiming the earth. That interpretation was poetic. It was also wrong.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin7 days ago in Humans
Romance Scams:
Every generation invents new ways to exploit human need, and the current one has perfected it through charm. The modern romance scam is not a single crime; it is a behavioral industry with global reach and local victims. It operates through empathy extraction—the deliberate hijacking of emotional circuitry under the illusion of connection. In other words, love as bait, routine as leash, and urgency as the kill switch.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin9 days ago in 01
The Ones Left Behind:
Shelters overflow every week with wagging tails and hopeful eyes. The young ones—the puppies and kittens—disappear within hours, scooped up by families eager for a blank slate. The old ones stay behind. They wait days, then weeks, often in silent confusion, still listening for footsteps they recognize.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin22 days ago in Petlife
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 Martin23 days ago in Humans











