The way I see it #thehumancondition, deals with issues that are specially human but also usually conditions, issues, or external forces that act a single human or specific subset of humans rather than humanity in general. It's not the same as humanity or humane. I use humanity or society when it doesn't have the same peculiarities that I feel #thehumancondition should have. However, because anyone can tag anything anything, people may not use thehumancondition in the same way I do.
I very much agree. In fact, "The Human Condition", to me is a philosophical question, that of "What does it mean to be human?", not in the Biological sense, or even a species-wide sense. from the wiki: The OP mentions that there is no one "human condition", and that's kind of the point. There is no one way to be human, and we all have a multitude of experiences which end up making our own personal 'Condition'. I would argue that things like Human Test are exploring the "Human Condition", what it means to be human. Neither of the #tags that the op suggests are any better. "Humane" is generally used in the context of "being kind to others, or other creatures". Humanity is usually used to refer to humans, the group. Just because you don't like the tag doesn't mean it's not accurate.The human condition is defined as "the characteristics, key events, and situations which compose the essentials of human existence, such as birth, growth, emotionality, aspiration, conflict, and mortality."