bookmark_borderAttempt

Attempt-I.mp3
Attempt-I.mp4
Attempt-Unplugged-Un..>
Attempt-Unplugged-Un..>
Attempt-Unplugged.mp3
Attempt-Unplugged.mp4
Attempt-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Going to make…
A record attempt
(None are exempt)
Let us partake….

[Verse 1]
Due to past mistakes
We’re under-taking… (undertaking!)
For goodness’ sake
Can’t help but to gravitate

[Chorus]
Going to make…
A record attempt
(At staying alive)
None are exempt
(If you want to survive)

[Bridge]
Arrive! (I’ve, I’ve, I’ve)
(I’m, mmm, mmm. alive!) Alive!

[Verse 2]
To thrive…
Taking a dive (to stay alive!)
Under-taking the undoing (of undertaking!)
Forsaking mistakes (in the making)

[Chorus]
Going to make…
A record attempt
(At staying alive)
None are exempt
(If you want to survive)

[Outro]
Arrive! (I’ve, I’ve, I’ve)
Alived (I’ve alived)

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderNeed-All in the Groove

Need-All-in-the-Groove-I.mp3
Need-All-in-the-Groove-I.mp4
Need-All-in-the-Groove-II.mp3
Need-All-in-the-Groove-II.mp4
Need-All-in-the-Groove-Reggae.mp3
Need-All-in-the-Groove-Reggae.mp4
Want-to-Move-intro.mp3

[Intro]
When the needle
Hits the groove
Does it make you…
Want to move

[Bridge]
Hits the groove
Can’t help but… (Move!)

[Verse 1]
In such a circumstance
(I can’t help but dance)
When that record starts playing
(I can’t help saying….)
“What’s left to prove”

[Bridge]
Hits the groove
Can’t help but… (Move!)

Sing! We need all….
(Need all)

[Chorus]
When the needle
Hits the groove (a forty-five)
Spinning round (comes alive)
RPM (around again)

[Bridge]
Hits the groove
Can’t help but… (Move!)
Sing! We need all….
(Need all)
Bring it all!
Sing it again
(Need-all) In the groove
(Let’s move!)

[Instrumental, Synth Solo, Bass]

[Verse 2]
Our mutual circumstance
(We can’t help but dance)
Our record starts playing
(We can’t help swaying….)

Now that you’ve….

[Bridge]
Hit the groove
Can’t help but… (Move!)

Sing! We need all….
(Need all)
Sing it again
(Need-all) In the groove
(Let’s move!)

[Chorus]
When the needle
Hits the groove (a forty-five)
Spinning round (comes alive)
RPM (around again)
This joint (is jumpin’)

[Outro]
Sing it again
(Need-all) In the groove
(Let’s move!)

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderRecording

Recording-0.mp3
Recording-0.mp4
Recording-I.mp3
Recording-I.mp4
Recording-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Testing, testing
(!, 2, 3)
Can you hear me?
Mind my suggesting

[Bridge]
Let’s start recording
(Ordering the sounds)

[Verse 1]
Let’s start recording
(Ordering the sounds)
Recordings will astound
(When love is unbound)
Can you set ‘er free

[Bridge]
With meeeeeee….

[Chorus]
Recording (ordering sound)
Sending (a message):
“Love can be found”
(Hear here)
Have no fear
(Find it hear)

[Verse 2]
Let’s start recording
(Hit record and play)
From the heart recording
(Loving every day)
Love freely!

(Can you set ‘er free)

With meeeeeee….
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
Recording (ordering sound)
Sending (a message):
“Love can be found”
(Hear here)
Have no fear
(Find it hear)

(Set ‘er free)

[Outro]
With meeeeeee….
(Hear here)
With meeeeeee….

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderBreaking

Breaking-0.mp3
Breaking-0.mp4
Breaking-I.mp3
Breaking-I.mp4
Breaking-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Record breaking
Breaking records

[Bridge]
No mistaking
(Record breaking)

[Verse 1]
Exploding infrastructure
You can’t insure
Buckled train tracks
(How do you like those facts)
Melted runways
(Can’t fly away on these kind of days)

[Bridge]
No mistaking
(Record breaking)

[Chorus]
Record breaking breaking records
(Can we hold it all together)
Breaking records record breaking
(Overlords are overtaking)

[Bridge]
(Noooo!) No mistaking
(Record breaking)

[Verse 2]
Texas Freeze (cool winter’s breeze)
Phoenix Heat Dome (frying your home)
Thermal expansion (flooded mansion)
Rockfalls and landslide (nowhere left to hide)

[Bridge]
No mistaking
(Record breaking)

[Chorus]
Record breaking breaking records
(Can we hold it all together)
Breaking records record breaking
(Overlords are overtaking)

[Outro]
(Noooo!) No mistaking
(Record breaking)

ABOUT THE SONG: What are some record breaking extreme climate events that involved the physics of “breaking”

That’s a really interesting way to frame it—looking at climate extremes through the lens of physics actually “breaking” in some sense, like thresholds being crossed, systems collapsing, or materials and structures literally fracturing. Here’s a list of some record-breaking climate events where the physics of “breaking” or “rupturing” applies, metaphorically and literally:


🌊 Atmospheric Rivers That Broke Atmospheric Saturation Limits

  • California, January–March 2023: A parade of atmospheric rivers dumped trillions of gallons of water, causing levees to burst and soil to fail. These events pushed air moisture content close to or even beyond theoretical saturation limits for cold systems.

  • Physics: Atmospheric rivers carrying moisture near maximum vapor capacity = saturation physics “breaking.”


🧊 Glacier Collapse & Ice Shelf Disintegration

  • Larsen B Ice Shelf (Antarctica, 2002) and Conger Ice Shelf (2022): These massive shelves literally broke apart, rapidly disintegrating into open ocean.

  • Physics: Stress > tensile strength → fracturing; positive feedback from meltwater lubrication accelerated internal ice fractures.


🌡️ Record Temperatures Exceeding Biophysical Limits

  • Jacobabad, Pakistan (2022) hit a wet-bulb temperature of 35°C—a theoretical limit beyond which human survival without cooling becomes physically impossible.

  • Physics: Human body heat regulation systems “break” under combined heat/humidity beyond this threshold.


🌪️ Tornado Wind Speed Limits Exceeded

  • EF5 Tornadoes (e.g., Moore, Oklahoma 2013): Wind speeds exceeded 200–300 mph, strong enough to shred asphalt from roads and obliterate steel-reinforced buildings.

  • Physics: Wind shear + convective energy break structural resistance limits.


🌾 Crop System Collapse from Heat Stress

  • India (2022): A record heatwave broke physiological stress limits for wheat during key growth stages, causing a systemic agricultural failure.

  • Physics: Exceeded thermal maximum for grain pollination → reproductive processes break down.


🌊 Thermohaline Circulation Weakening

  • The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) is nearing a tipping point where it could collapse (some models predict this as early as mid-century).

  • Physics: Salt and temperature gradients driving ocean currents weaken, and the system risks “breaking” into a new stable (but dangerous) state.


🌀 Typhoons That Shatter Ocean Heat Barrier Limits

  • Typhoon Haiyan (2013) and Typhoon Goni (2020): These storms intensified so rapidly that they broke records for wind speed and energy.

  • Physics: Heat content in upper ocean layers passed previously assumed limits → storms grew beyond old max intensity models.


🏚️ Infrastructure Physically Breaking From Thermal Expansion

  • Texas Freeze (2021) and Phoenix Heat Dome (2023): Water pipes burst en masse from freezing, while roads buckled from thermal expansion.

  • Physics: Exceeding material tolerances—either expansion or contraction rates—causes system breakage.

🧊 Ice Shelf Collapse (Larsen B & C, Thwaites)

  • Thwaites Glacier (aka the “Doomsday Glacier”) in Antarctica is currently cracking from beneath as warm seawater erodes its base. A recent study showed fracture zones spreading rapidly, and scientists have observed large rifts and shear failures, suggesting that mechanical breaking of the ice shelf could occur within decades—or sooner.

  • The Larsen B Ice Shelf famously disintegrated in 2002 over a period of weeks, involving tens of thousands of square kilometers of ice shattering into the sea—a mechanical collapse caused by surface meltwater forcing cracks deeper (hydrofracturing).
    📚 Physics involved: tensile fracture, hydrofracture propagation, material fatigue under warming.


🌪️ Record-Intensity Tornadoes and Wind Bursts

  • In 2023 and 2024, the U.S. experienced multiple EF-4 and EF-5 tornadoes where entire buildings were ripped from foundations, and asphalt was reportedly scoured from roads.

  • These tornadoes involve pressure drops and rotational wind speeds exceeding 200+ mph, causing explosive decompression in structures—roofs and walls can literally blow outwards.
    📚 Physics involved: pressure gradients, rotational force, shear stress, structural failure.


🌊 Dam Breaches and Levee Failures

  • In Libya (2023), Storm Daniel led to the collapse of two dams near Derna, killing over 11,000 people. Intense rainfall caused the dams to overtop and break, releasing a deadly flood wave.

  • The structures failed due to a combination of hydrostatic pressure, soil erosion, and inadequate maintenance—climate change added the extreme rainfall.
    📚 Physics involved: hydraulic pressure, overtopping, material failure from erosion.


🪵 Tree Snapping from Heat Domes and Wind Events

  • The 2021 Pacific Northwest Heat Dome saw urban trees literally crack open or fall from internal dehydration and high wind stress. In forested areas, heat- and drought-weakened trees snapped or uprooted during microbursts.
    📚 Physics involved: loss of internal turgor pressure, trunk fatigue, wind torque exceeding strength threshold.


🏔️ Rockfalls and Landslides from Permafrost Thaw

  • As permafrost thaws in places like Alaska, Canada, and the Himalayas, mountainsides are collapsing. One recent event in Alaska involved a massive landslide triggered by the breakup of frozen ground holding rocks in place.

  • These events are increasing in frequency and size due to warming.
    📚 Physics involved: cohesion loss, gravity-driven fracture, ice acting as structural “glue” breaking down.


🔥 Exploding Infrastructure Due to Heat

  • During recent European heatwaves (2022–2023), train tracks buckled, runways melted, and power lines snapped or sagged.

  • In some cases, underground pipes even exploded due to expansion pressures—especially in older systems.
    📚 Physics involved: thermal expansion, structural fatigue, ductile-to-brittle transitions in materials.

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSwing

Swing-0.mp3
Swing-0.mp4
Swing-I.mp3
Swing-I.mp4
Swing-Reggae.mp3
Swing-Reggae.mp4
Swing-Reprise.mp3
Swing-Reprise.mp4
Swing-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Here’s the thing:
Record (swing)
Record swing (thing)

[Bridge]
Ding, Ding, Ding!
(Closing bell)
Oh well (oh well)

[Verse 1]
It was another
Record swing
I keep hoping
But… (Oh, Brother!)

[Chorus]
Here’s the thing:
Whiplash (just can’t last)
Enough wondering (and squandering)
Our precious time (with your all time crime)

[Bridge]
Record (swing)
Record swing (thing)
Ding, Ding, Ding!
(Closing bell)
Oh well (oh well)
Instability (in ability)
Not apt (to adapt)

[Verse 1]
It was another
Record swing
I keep hoping
But… (Oh, Brother!)

[Chorus]
Here’s the thing:
Whiplash (just can’t last)
Enough wondering (and squandering)
Our precious time (with your all time crime)

[Bridge]
Record (swing)
Record swing (thing)
Ding, Ding, Ding!
(Closing bell)
Oh well (oh well)
Volatility (instability)
Quite apt (to collapse)

[Outro]
Here’s the thing:
Whiplash (just can’t last)
Neurological (gone illogical)
Not sane (in the membrane)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Swing” is a sharp, satirical take on market volatility, with a clear undercurrent of criticism directed at Trump-era economic policy. It weaves the emotional rollercoaster of financial instability into a poetic structure—using rhyme, repetition, and imagery to capture the psychological and systemic consequences of unpredictable governance.

 Verse 1

It was another
Record swing
I keep hoping
But… (Oh, Brother!)

This opening sets a tone of exhaustion and disillusionment. “Record swing” refers to wild intraday market fluctuations—massive ups and downs in stock indices like the Dow or S&P 500. It implies that extreme volatility has become the norm. The “I keep hoping” line expresses a desire for stability or rational leadership, while the exclamation “Oh, Brother!” suggests frustration—perhaps with false promises or the whiplash from Trump’s inconsistent economic signals.

Chorus

Here’s the thing:
Whiplash (just can’t last)
Enough wondering (and squandering)
Our precious time (with your all time crime)

This is a powerful critique of leadership-induced chaos. “Whiplash” evokes the constant reversals in policy—think tariff tweets, contradictory Fed comments, and impulsive economic decrees. The phrase “all time crime” could refer to reckless fiscal policies (like massive tax cuts without offsets), or deeper—undermining democracy and long-term economic sustainability for short-term political gain. “Squandering our precious time” might reflect the opportunity cost of dealing with one economic emergency after another, rather than addressing systemic issues like climate change or inequality.

Bridge

Record (swing)
Record swing (thing)
Ding, Ding, Ding!
(Closing bell)
Oh well (oh well)
Instability (in ability)
Not apt (to adapt)

Here, the “record swing” becomes almost farcical—like an everyday headline. The “Ding, Ding, Ding!” echoes the NYSE closing bell, punctuating the chaos. The phrase “instability in ability” is particularly clever—it suggests that the ability to govern is itself unstable. “Not apt to adapt” underscores the failure of leadership to respond competently to changing conditions—be it economic shocks, pandemic recovery, or geopolitical shifts.

Repetition of Verse 1 & Chorus

The repetition reinforces the feeling of cyclical trauma—we’re stuck in the same loop of economic whiplash and failed expectations. Hope persists, but it’s increasingly met with resignation.

Bridge 2

Volatility (instability)
Quite apt (to collapse)

This line suggests that volatility has become more than a byproduct—it’s now an embedded feature of the system. The final note, “quite apt to collapse,” delivers a grim warning: these conditions aren’t just unpleasant—they’re unsustainable.

Outro

Here’s the thing:
Whiplash (just can’t last)
Neurological (gone illogical)
Not sane (in the membrane)

The final outro links economic instability to psychological breakdown. “Neurological gone illogical” is a poetic way of saying the situation has become mentally and structurally unhinged—perhaps a jab at how leaders have governed irrationally or even destructively. “Not sane in the membrane” plays on the Cypress Hill lyric, suggesting madness at the highest levels of decision-making.

Overall Interpretation

Swing” is a song of warning and weariness. It captures the emotional fatigue of living through economic instability driven by erratic, populist leadership—likely Trump’s second term—characterized by impulsive policies, trade wars, and a disregard for long-term consequences. The record-setting volatility it depicts isn’t seen as market evolution, but as a symptom of institutional decay.

In this light, “Swing” becomes an anthem of the economic anxious class—those who see through the illusion of growth and are bracing for collapse.

From the album “Record

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderDown Day

Down-Day-0.mp3
Down-Day-0.mp4
Down-Day-I.mp3
Down-Day-I.mp4
Down-Day-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Another record down day
(Like a skipping record)
That continues to play
Be it in (discord)

[Verse 1]
Confidence is sagging
(I wouldn’t be bragging)
Economy’s dragging
(Your sacking’s lacking)

[Bridge]
Systemic cracking
Under the weight
(Of your trait)

[Chorus]
Another record down day
(Like a skipping record)
That continues to play
Be it in (discord)
Record (down day)
(Record) down day
Record (down day)

[Bridge]
Cash crash
(Mad dash)
“For the door!”
(No, no more more)

[Verse 2]
Confidence is lacking
(Markets took a whacking)
Isolation nation (isolation)
Protectionism (chasm)
Tribalization (ation, ation)

[Chorus]
Another record down day
(Like a skipping record)
That continues to play
Be it in (discord)
Record (down day)
(Record) down day
Record (down day)

[Outro]
Down (down, down)
Record (down day)
Down (down, down)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Down Day” is a tightly wound, poetic commentary on financial collapse—a lament for the markets in the wake of toxic political leadership, aimed at Trump’s second term. The lyrics blend economic jargon with metaphor, painting a dystopian picture of confidence shattered and global markets buckling under bad governance.

Verse 1

Confidence is sagging (I wouldn’t be bragging)
Economy’s dragging (Your sacking’s lacking)

This sets the stage: public and investor confidence is collapsing. The tone is both cynical and accusatory. “Your sacking’s lacking” could point to failed political purges or poor management decisions—possibly Trump’s attacks on regulatory and monetary officials like Fed Chair Powell. There’s a suggestion of ineffectual leadership in the face of economic decay.

Bridge

Systemic cracking
Under the weight
(Of your trait)

“Systemic cracking” signals that this isn’t just a market hiccup—it’s structural. “Your trait” likely refers to a specific governing style: erratic, authoritarian, reckless. This could be interpreted as a critique of Trump’s personal tendencies—his impulsivity, tribalism, and disdain for institutions—which are metaphorically breaking the economy.

Chorus

Another record down day
(Like a skipping record)

That continues to play
Be it in (discord)
Record (down day)

The repetition of “record down day” hammers in the emotional rhythm of loss. The “skipping record” image is clever—it evokes something broken and stuck, looping the same destructive outcome. “Be it in discord” suggests both market volatility and political chaos—especially fitting for a polarized, gridlocked America. There’s also a poetic pun: discord (disagreement/conflict) vs. “Discord” (the platform often associated with online radicalization)—a nod to modern tribalism?

Bridge 2

Cash crash (Mad dash)
“For the door!”
(No, no more more)

This captures panic—what happens in a full-blown market exodus. “Cash crash” and “mad dash” are visceral, and “for the door” evokes investors trying to escape plummeting markets. The repeated “no more” echoes investor fatigue or perhaps resignation to irreversible damage.

Verse 2

Confidence is lacking (Markets took a whacking)
Isolation nation (isolation)
Protectionism (chasm)
Tribalization (ation, ation)

Here, the song directly critiques Trump’s America First policies. “Isolation nation” and “protectionism” hint at trade wars and withdrawal from global cooperation. “Tribalization” shows how internal division—political, social, cultural—is accelerating economic fragmentation. These “-ation” suffixes build like a chant, mimicking both rhetoric and decay.

Final Chorus & Outro

Down (down, down)
Record (down day)
Down (down, down)

The outro is somber and relentless—a slow fade into economic entropy. It doesn’t resolve—it just descends, mirroring the economic spiral it portrays.

Overall Interpretation:

Down Day” is a protest track dressed as an economic eulogy. It interprets market collapses not as isolated events but as consequences of systemic political dysfunction—rooted in isolationism, protectionism, and authoritarian governance. The song suggests that Trump’s policies have not only triggered capital flight and confidence loss but have also cracked the economic and institutional foundations of the U.S.

It’s both a musical recession indicator and a cultural critique—cleverly framing economic data through emotion, repetition, and rhyme.

From the album “Record

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderWarped Vinyl

Warped-Vinyl-0.mp3
Warped-Vinyl-0.mp4
Warped-Vinyl-I.mp3
Warped-Vinyl-I.mp4
Warped-Vinyl-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Vinyl warped
(Left in the sun)
Final play
(Very last one)
Happened today

[Bridge]
Skipping
{tripping and flipping)

[Verse 1]
Warped vinyl
Guess that’s final
Not much you can do…
Brings the blues through

[Chorus]
Vinyl warped
(Left in the sun)
Final play
(Very last one)
Happened today

[Bridge]
Skipping
{tripping and flipping)

[Verse 2]
No need to curse
It couldn’t have been worse?
If it were melting….
Those blues would be belting

[Chorus]
Vinyl warped
(Left in the sun)
Final play
(Very last one)
Happened today

[Outro]
Skipping
{Skipping and skipping)

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderRecord

Record-I.mp3
Record-I.mp4
Record-II.mp3
Record-II.mp4
Record-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Record breaking
(Earth shaking)
Over the top
(Just can’t stop)

[Verse 1]
Record heat
(We’ll try to beat)
Breached threshold
(Never grow old)

[Bridge]
We’re on our way
Self-inflicted foray

[Chorus]
Record breaking
(Earth shaking)
Over the top
(Just won’t stop)

[Verse 2]
Record spew
(CO2)
Surpass gas
(Way too fast)

[Bridge]
We’re on our way
To total decay

[Chorus]
Record breaking
(Earth shaking)
Over the top
(Just don’t stop)

[Bridge]
We’re on our way
Into dismay

[Outro]
Record breaking
(Earth baking)
About to drop
(Record stop)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Recent years have witnessed unprecedented climate records, underscoring the escalating impact of human-induced global warming. Here’s an overview of some significant milestones:​

Record-Breaking Global Temperatures

  • 2024 was confirmed as the hottest year on record, with global average temperatures reaching 1.55°C above pre-industrial levels. This marks the first time a full calendar year has surpassed the critical 1.5°C threshold, signaling intensified climate risks .​

  • This record followed 2023, which was previously the warmest year, with temperatures 1.45°C above pre-industrial levels .

Ocean Heatwaves and Marine Ecosystems

  • The climate crisis has tripled the duration of ocean heatwaves since the 1940s. These prolonged heat events have severely impacted marine life, damaging ecosystems like coral reefs and kelp forests, and have contributed to more intense storms and rainfall .​

Extreme Weather Events

  • In the United States, 2024 experienced 27 separate billion-dollar weather and climate disasters, including hurricanes, severe storms, and droughts. This is the second-highest annual count in the 45-year record.

  • Europe faced its hottest year on record in 2024, with over 413,000 people affected by floods, storms, wildfires, and heatwaves. Notably, southeastern Europe endured its longest recorded heatwave, and wildfires in Portugal burned 110,000 hectares .​

Ice Loss and Sea-Level Rise

  • 2023 saw record lows in Antarctic sea ice extent and significant glacier retreat, contributing to accelerated sea-level rise. These changes are largely irreversible on human timescales and pose long-term risks to coastal communities .

Greenhouse Gas Concentrations

  • Greenhouse gas levels reached new highs in 2023, with carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide concentrations surpassing previous records. These increases are primarily driven by fossil fuel combustion and deforestation .​

These records highlight the urgent need for comprehensive climate action to mitigate the escalating impacts of global warming.

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderMaster of Disaster

Master-of-Disaster-0.mp3
Master-of-Disaster-0.mp4
Master-of-Disaster-I.mp3
Master-of-Disaster-I.mp4
Master-of-Disaster-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Hut (2, 3, 4)
But (2, 3, 4)

[Verse 1]
The slaves begged for a master
A disaster master of disaster
The perfect fit (just won’t quit)
For president (no won’t relent)
Put a dent
In all that’s meant

[Bridge]
Hut (2, 3, 4)
But (2, 3, 4)

[Chorus]
Do you really want to bring down
All around
Do you really (really, really)
Want to tear it down
(All around)

[Bridge]
Steppin’ on our sand castle
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
(Causin’ a hassle)
Devils wrestle

[Verse 2]
To their own detriment
(They never got what “it” meant)
Woe, oh, no whoa
(Stagnant)
Arrogance in ignorance
(Nemesis is is…)
The sheep callin’ for the butcher
(Come slaughter!)

[Bridge]
Which demon won?
Hut (2, 3, 4)
But (2, 3, 4)
Can’t endure much more

[Chorus]
Do you really want to bring down
All around
Do you really (really, really)
Want to tear it down
(All around)

[Bridge]
Smashed sand castle
(Devils wrestle)
Which demon won?

[Outro]
Hut (2, 3, 4)
But (2, 3, 4)
Till… (no more!)

From the album “Deviation

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderHeavy Tales

Heavy-Tales-0.mp4
Heavy-Tales-I.mp3
Heavy-Tales-I.mp4
Heavy-Tales-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(Tales of heavy tails)
Volatility
In predictability
Instability
(It never fails)
Heavy Tales

[Verse 1]
His bell curve has fallen flat
Hard to tell where it’s at
What the hell… if the shoe fits
Logic’s ripped to bits

[Chorus]
(Tales of heavy tails)
Volatility
In predictability
Instability
(It never fails)

[Bridge]
Heavy Tales
Inequality
(From see to whining see)

[Verse 2]
His bell curve… hammered flat
Enamored no habitat
The statistical nitwits
Shred it all to bits

[Chorus]
(Tales of heavy tails)
Volatility
In predictability
Instability
(It never fails)

[Bridge]
Heavy Tales
Inequality
(From see to whining see)

[Chorus]
(Tales of heavy tails)
Volatility
In predictability
Instability
(It never fails)

[Outro]
Heavy Tale
(Life set sail)

A SCIENCE NOTE
When a bell curve flattens out, it means the data distribution is becoming less peaked and more spread out—a phenomenon known in statistics as an increase in standard deviation or an increase in kurtosis (specifically platykurtic).

Here’s what it implies:

Flatter Bell Curve (Higher Standard Deviation):

  • More variability: The values in the data set are more spread out from the mean.

  • Less predictability: There’s less clustering around the average—data is more scattered.

  • Tails are heavier or broader: More extreme values (outliers) are present, or more likely.

  • In practical terms: It’s harder to make accurate predictions or draw conclusions because the “typical” case isn’t as typical anymore.

Real-world economic example:

In the economy, a flattening bell curve could suggest:

  • Widening income inequality (e.g., more people at the very low and very high ends of income).

  • Unstable financial markets, where asset returns are all over the place rather than tightly centered.

  • Climate variability, where weather events (like temperature or rainfall) deviate more frequently from historical norms.

From the album “Deviation

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderThe Troll King

The-Troll-King-0.mp3
The-Troll-King-0.mp4
The-Troll-King-I.mp3
The-Troll-King-I.mp4
The-Troll-King-II.mp3
The-Troll-King-II.mp4
The-Troll-King-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3
The-Troll-King-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4
The-Troll-King-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(Demolition)
Destruction
(An evolution)
Deviation

[Bridge]
(Whoa, oh, oh)
Might wanna hold tight

[Verse 1]
Here’s the thing
The Troll King
Plays the role
… but has no goal

[Chorus]
(Demolition) Destruction
(An evolution) Deviation
(Destiny) Didn’t have to be
(Can’t you see) A war on humanity

[Bridge]
(Whoa, oh, oh)
Might wanna hold tight
(Has everyone lost sight)
Hold tight (delight)
Incite (insight)

Might wanna hold tight

[Verse 2]
The Troll King
Knows nothing
The ass leads the mass
To the End of Human
(Confess… a mess)

[Chorus]
(Demolition) Destruction
(An evolution) Deviation
(Destiny) Didn’t have to be
(Can’t you see) A war on humanity

[Bridge]
(Whoa, oh, oh)
Might wanna hold tight
(Has everyone lost sight)
Hold tight (delight)
Incite (insight)

[Outro]
The Troll King
Knows nothing
(But suffering, ring, ring)

From the album “Deviation

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderOff the Beaten Path

Off-the-Beaten-Path-0.mp3
Off-the-Beaten-Path-0.mp4
Off-the-Beaten-Path-I.mp3
Off-the-Beaten-Path-I.mp4
Off-the-Beaten-Path-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(Off the beaten path)
Headed for the ledge
(Going to take a bath)
Somewhere….

[Bridge]
Over the edge
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
(You know…)
Like the buffalo

[Verse 1]
Startled
Stampeded
Rattled
Proceeded

[Chorus]
(Off the beaten path)
Headed for the ledge
(Going to take a bath)
Somewhere….

[Bridge]
Over the edge
(You know…)
Like the buffalo

[Verse 2]
Alarmed
All harmed
Too late
To debate

[Chorus]
(Off the beaten path)
Headed for the ledge
(Going to take a bath)
Somewhere….

[Bridge]
Over the edge
(You know…)
Like the buffalo

[Chorus]
(Off the beaten path)
Headed for the ledge
(Going to take a bath)
Somewhere….

[Outro]
Over the edge
(You know…)
Like the buffalo

From the album “Deviation

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSooner or Later?

Sooner-or-Later-0.mp3
Sooner-or-Later-0.mp4
Sooner-or-Later-I.mp3
Sooner-or-Later-I.mp4
Sooner-or-Later-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Will damage come
(Sooner or later?)
We’ve come undone
(The eliminator)

[Verse 1]
The models
Are untested
Nothing jells
Economy arrest4ed

[Chorus]
Will damage come
(Sooner or later)
We’ve come undone
(The eliminator)

[Bridge]
Run!
(It’s the Service, Stupid)
Can’t believe you did what you did
(Fundamental misconception)
Ain’t no fun in misrepresentations
(Devastation!)

[Verse 2]
The jobs with pay
Didn’t go away
It’s just the way
We chose to play

[Chorus]
Will damage come
(Sooner or later)
We’ve come undone
(The eliminator)

[Bridge]
Run!
(It’s the Service, Stupid)
Can’t believe you did what you did
(Fundamental misconception)
Ain’t no fun in misrepresentations
(Devastation!)

[Chorus]
Will damage come
(Sooner or later)
We’ve come undone
(The eliminator)

[Outro]
Run!

ABOUT THE SONG: — It’s the Service, Stupid: Understanding the Real U.S. Economy

One of the most fundamental misconceptions of Trumpenomics is the belief that the United States is—or should be—a manufacturing-first economy. In reality, the U.S. has evolved into a service-based powerhouse and is now the world’s largest exporter of services, including finance, healthcare, education, software, intellectual property, and other knowledge-driven industries.

This misunderstanding leads to flawed policies, especially regarding trade and tariffs. By focusing solely on manufacturing, Donald Trump’s economic rhetoric and calculations ignore the true engine of American growth: its service sector. Consequently, trade deficits and labor dynamics are misrepresented, giving the public a distorted view of global economic relationships.

Moreover, the claim that American jobs have been “shipped overseas” doesn’t stand up to scrutiny. The vast majority of high-paying jobs in the U.S.—from tech and logistics to finance and retail—were never exported. Companies like Microsoft, Meta, Amazon, Apple, Nvidia, Tesla, and Walmart generate millions of high-wage, service-based and technology-driven jobs that never originated as U.S. manufacturing positions in the first place. These firms pay some of the highest wages in the country, often without union representation, and their core operations remain solidly domestic.

Many of these companies outsource some manufacturing to countries with a comparative advantage—not to “steal” American jobs, but because the U.S. never had a competitive edge in those areas to begin with. Attempting to resurrect those jobs now through protectionist measures only undermines U.S. competitiveness and innovation.

Labor policy should be forward-facing. The labor movement must pivot from defending obsolete jobs to championing education, reskilling, and innovation. As with the buggy whip—once essential, now archaic—progress depends on adaptation, not nostalgia.

The truth is clear: America’s economic future lies not in reindustrialization, but in continuing to lead the global service economy. Failing to recognize this does more than hurt economic efficiency—it risks steering the nation backward just when it needs to charge forward. By eroding global confidence in the U.S. as a reliable trading partner, Trump risks permanently weakening the dollar and undermining America’s ability to finance its debt at sustainable levels.

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

 

From the album “Deviation

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderDeviant

Deviant-0.mp3
Deviant-0.mp4
Deviant-I.mp3
Deviant-I.mp4
Deviant-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(E gadz!)
The deviant’s deviation
(Gone mad, gone bad)
Decline of civilization

[Verse 1]
The president
Needs revoked of residence
Quite evident
Explode and erode

[Chorus]
(E gadz!)
The deviant’s deviation
(Gone mad, gone bad)
Decline of civilization

[Bridge]
(After all…)
Watch us fall
(Once the first)
Now we thirst

[Verse 2]
Our leader —
Economy bleeder
Taking our whole
Down his rabbit hole

[Chorus]
(E gadz!)
The deviant’s deviation
(Gone mad, gone bad)
Decline of civilization

[Bridge]
(After all…)
Watch us fall
(Once the first)
Now we thirst

[Outro]
(E gadz!)
The deviant’s deviation
(Gone mad, gone bad)
Decline of civilization

ABOUT THE SONG

Song of the Day: “Deviant”
The industrial age meets its industrial anthem.

Today’s Song of the Day is “Deviant”, an industrial-influenced protest track that serves as a raw and gritty soundtrack to the unraveling of the American economy in real time. With distorted guitar riffs, emotionally charged vocals, and razor-sharp lyrics, the track captures the chaos and disillusionment of the modern era—particularly under President Trump’s second term.

The song’s lyrics are direct and unflinching, portraying a “deviant’s deviation” from economic stability and democratic norms. Each verse exposes the damage done: a president whose leadership erodes the pillars of governance, a populace left to thirst for accountability, and a country tumbling down a rabbit hole of failed economic policy. The haunting choruses and raw instrumentation mirror the volatility of our current moment — one defined by fractured markets, frayed alliances, and fading confidence in American leadership.

But “Deviant” is more than just metaphor — it’s grounded in harsh economic reality:

  • $6.6 Trillion in market value erased within two days in April 2025.

  • Recession odds now at 45%, the highest since late 2023.

  • S&P 500 down 12%, and consumer confidence lower than during the Great Recession.

  • GDP projected to shrink by 0.3%, marking a sharp economic reversal.

  • 80% of fund managers cite Trump’s trade war as the top global risk.

As the chorus warns — “Gone mad, gone bad” — Deviant offers a visceral, lyrical echo of a nation in economic freefall, revealing the soundtrack of a civilization on the brink.

Let the distortion speak.
Let the numbers resonate.
Let the music document history.

 

The Details
This song is a powerful protest piece that uses vivid language and sharp imagery to critique the economic and political damage caused by Trump’s policies. It portrays Trump as a destabilizing force—“the deviant’s deviation”—whose leadership has eroded both the economy and America’s global standing. References to a declining civilization, economic thirst, and a fall from being “once the first” suggest a loss of prosperity and moral direction. The instrumental solos reinforce a sense of chaos and unraveling, evoking the emotional and structural breakdown of society under reckless leadership.

Since the beginning of President Donald Trump’s second term in January 2025, the U.S. economy has experienced several significant deviations from historical norms, particularly in response to aggressive tariff policies and escalating trade tensions. These deviations have manifested across various economic indicators, including stock market performance, investor sentiment, GDP growth projections, and consumer confidence.

1. Record-Breaking Stock Market Declines

In early April 2025, the U.S. stock market suffered its most substantial two-day loss in history. The Dow Jones Industrial Average plummeted over 4,000 points, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite each declined by approximately 10% and 11%, respectively. This unprecedented drop erased over $6.6 trillion in market value, surpassing the volatility seen during the COVID-19 pandemic. The CBOE Volatility Index (VIX), often referred to as “Wall Street’s fear gauge,” spiked to 45.31, its highest level since 2020.

2. Surge in Recession Probabilities

Economists have raised the probability of a U.S. recession within the next year to 45%, the highest estimate since December 2023. This increase is largely attributed to the economic impact of new tariffs and the resultant slowdown in business investment and consumer spending.

3. Decline in Investor Confidence

Investor sentiment has reached its most pessimistic level in three decades, with 80% of fund managers identifying the trade war as the primary risk to markets. This sentiment has contributed to significant market volatility and a 12% decline in the S&P 500 from its February peak.

4. Sharp Drop in Consumer Confidence

Consumer confidence has declined sharply, reaching levels lower than those observed during the Great Recession and the COVID-19 pandemic. This downturn reflects growing concerns about inflation, job security, and the broader economic outlook amid ongoing trade disputes.Vox

5. Contraction in GDP Growth

The U.S. economy is showing signs of contraction, with the Atlanta Federal Reserve projecting a 0.3% decline in GDP for the first quarter of 2025. This projection marks a significant reversal from the 4% growth observed in the previous quarter and underscores the economic strain resulting from recent trade policies.

These developments indicate that the U.S. economy is experiencing significant stress under the current administration’s trade policies. The combination of market volatility, declining confidence, and slowing growth suggests a need for careful monitoring and potential policy adjustments to mitigate further economic disruption.

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Deviation

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderBig Flows

Big-Flows-0.mp3
Big-Flows-0.mp4
Big-Flows-I.mp3
Big-Flows-I.mp4
Big-Flows-II.mp3
Big-Flows-II.mp4
Big-Flows-Reggae.mp3
Big-Flows-Reggae.mp4
Big-Flows-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Less abundant reserves
The engine veers and swerves
There she goes
(The big flows)

[Bridge]
Don’t you know
(Low, low, low)

[Verse 1]
Tidal waves of cash
Watch the flow go
Hate to dine and dash
But, well… (you know)

[Chorus]
Less abundant reserves
The engine veers and swerves
There she goes
(The big flows)

[Bridge]
Resources
(Reverse courses)
Cracked our safe
(Smacked our face)
Don’t you know
(Low, low, low)

[Verse 2]
The tide’s going low
Watch the cash flow
Really hard to know
How low she’ll go….

[Chorus]
Less abundant reserves
The engine veers and swerves
There she goes
(The big flows)

[Bridge]
Resources
(Reverse courses)
Cracked our safe
(Smacked our face)
Don’t you know
(Low, low, low)

[Outro]
There she goes
(The big flows)
Don’t you know
(Low, low, low)

ABOUT THE SONG
Cracked Safe Haven: Historic Deviations in U.S. Treasury Bonds

Exceeding a standard deviation means that a data point is significantly different from the average — a statistical red flag.

In finance or economics:

  • A move of 1 standard deviation is unusual but not rare.

  • 2 or more indicates extreme behavior — often signaling stress, instability, or systemic change.

When U.S. Treasury bonds — historically the world’s most stable asset — move multiple standard deviations, it’s not just noise. It suggests deep structural shifts in fiscal policy, market confidence, or macroeconomic expectations.

U.S. Treasury bonds — especially long-duration ones like the 10-year and 30-year Treasuries — have recently deviated by multiple standard deviations from historical norms in several key dimensions.

Why It Matters

  • Bonds are usually the “safe haven” — but now they’re chaotic, cracked, and misaligned.

  • This upends traditional risk models used by banks, pensions, and governments.

  • It’s also a signal of fiscal fragility — markets demanding higher compensation for lending to the U.S.

The Big Question: What If the Dollar Loses Its Reserve Status?

Ultimately, the darkest scenario is no longer unthinkable: What happens if the U.S. dollar loses its status as the world’s reserve currency?

This would unleash a profound economic reset, marked by:

  • Exploding U.S. borrowing costs

  • A collapse in consumer purchasing power

  • Global capital flight from U.S. assets

  • Severe contraction in both trade and credit

  • Domestic political and economic instability unlike anything in modern history

Conclusion: We Are In the Experiment Now

From the album “Deviation

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment