bookmark_borderMicrofilm

Microfilm.mp3
Microfilm.mp4
Microfilm-Best-Of.mp3
Microfilm-Best-Of.mp4
Microfilm-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Make no mistake
(The microfilm is in the birthday cake)
All are state’s secrets
(Become are worst regrets)

[Bridge]
Roll the film… (Action!)
Tearing up the Constitution

[Chorus]
Follow the MacGuffin
For what everyone is after
The End will soon begin
Following our disaster

[Verse 2]
Did you know our top spy
(Loves to lie, lie, lie)
Making things urgent
(’cause he’s a double agent)

[Bridge]
Roll the film… (Action!)
Tearing up the Constitution

[Chorus]
Follow the MacGuffin
For what everyone is after
The End will soon begin
Following our disaster

[Outro]
Roll the film… (Action!)
Tearing up the Constitution

ABOUT THE SONG
The quote “The microfilm is in the birthday cake” is a classic example of a spy movie cliché or parody—a humorous or dramatic line that plays on the trope of hiding secret information in an ordinary object. While it’s widely referenced in pop culture, there is no definitive source that originated the exact line. However, variations of it appear in satirical works, cartoons, and comedies spoofing spy films, such as:

“Spy Hard” (1996), a parody film starring Leslie Nielsen.

“Get Smart”, a 1960s TV comedy series about a bumbling secret agent.

Various Looney Tunes or MAD Magazine sketches.

The line is often used to poke fun at the absurdity of Cold War-era espionage stories, where microfilm—a small, concealable film used for storing documents—was a common MacGuffin.

A MacGuffin is a plot device—an object, event, or goal—that drives the story forward, even though its specific nature may be unimportant to the audience. The term was popularized by Alfred Hitchcock, who used it often in his thrillers.

Key traits of a MacGuffin:

  • It’s what everyone in the story is after (e.g., spies chasing a secret formula, adventurers hunting a treasure).

  • Its details usually don’t matter—the story is really about the characters’ actions and conflicts.

  • It often disappears from focus once it’s served its purpose.

Famous examples:

  • The briefcase in Pulp Fiction

  • The Ark of the Covenant in Raiders of the Lost Ark

  • The ring in The Lord of the Rings (though in this case it becomes more central)

In this song, the MacGuffin serves as a metaphor for the fragile state of national security and the ongoing failures of leadership at the highest level. The imagery of the “microfilm in the birthday cake” playfully masks serious breaches of classified information, while the repeated tearing of the Constitution underscores the erosion of democratic principles. The MacGuffin—typically a meaningless object that everyone chases—here symbolizes the distractions, lies, and misdirection surrounding our Commander in Chief’s accountability and the dangerous consequences of misused power.

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Roll

bookmark_borderSines

Sines.mp3
Sines.mp4
Sines-Best-Of.mp3
Sines-Best-Of.mp4
Sines-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Have you seen the sines
(Of the times)

[Verse 1]
Just look around
Signs abound
They can be found
All around

[Bridge]
Have you seen the sines
(Of the times)
They’re rollin’, rollin, in
(The high tides begin)

[Chorus]
Feedback loops
Harmonic response
No lack of “oops”
In need of renaissance

[Verse 2]
Just look around
Sines are inbound
Here’s another round
End of the line bound

[Bridge]
Have you seen the sines
(Of the times)
They’re rollin’, rollin, in
(The high tides begin)

[Chorus]
Feedback loops
Harmonic response
No lack of “oops”
In need of renaissance

[Outro]
Feedback loops
Harmonic response
No lack of “oops”
In need of renaissance

A SCIENCE NOTE

Sine waves relate to climate change in several important ways, especially in how scientists model, analyze, and predict climate patterns and variability over time. Here are the key connections:

1. Natural Climate Cycles

Many natural climate phenomena follow approximately sinusoidal (sine wave-like) patterns:

  • Milankovitch Cycles: Earth’s orbital changes (eccentricity, axial tilt, and precession) affect solar energy reaching the planet and follow cycles that resemble sine waves over tens to hundreds of thousands of years. These influence glacial and interglacial periods.

  • Seasonal Variations: The annual cycle of temperature and solar radiation at any location on Earth is close to a sine wave.

  • Ocean-Atmosphere Oscillations: Phenomena like the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), and North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO) show roughly cyclic behaviors over time, often modeled using sine or cosine functions.

2. Climate Models & Signal Processing

Climate scientists use sine waves (and Fourier analysis) to:

  • Decompose temperature and CO₂ time series into frequencies (e.g., identifying periodic components versus long-term trends).

  • Separate natural variability (like seasonal or decadal oscillations) from anthropogenic trends (caused by greenhouse gases).

  • Improve forecasting by modeling the climate system as a combination of wave-like patterns plus chaotic and trend-based elements.

3. Feedback Loops and Harmonic Response

In systems theory, feedback loops (positive and negative) in climate dynamics can lead to oscillations similar to those seen in damped or forced harmonic systems:

  • Melting ice reduces albedo → increases warming → melts more ice. This is a nonlinear feedback, but when modeled locally or over short periods, it can exhibit sine-like fluctuations before spiraling out or stabilizing.

4. Detection of Climate Change Signals

Because the climate system is noisy, scientists often look for anomalies that depart from expected sine-like patterns, such as:

  • Long-term warming trends that shift the baseline upward.

  • Increasing amplitude (more extreme highs/lows) or changing frequency of events like heatwaves or rainfall.

From the album “Roll

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderIs Land

Is-Land-Pt-1.mp3
Is-Land-Pt-1.mp4
Is-Land-Pt-2.mp3
Is-Land-Pt-2.mp4

[Intro]
Whoa woe, oh oh (hope so)
Whoa woe, oh oh (hope so)

[Verse 1]
Does man take the stand
That all he does demand
Is at his command….
(Does he understand)

[Chorus]
Is this island an I land
(No!) No man is an island
Who owns my days
Who loves, who pays?

[Bridge]
Whoa woe, oh oh (hope so)

[Verse 2]
Does man’s primary role
To rule and take control
Does he understand….
(Who’s in command)

[Chorus]
Is this island an I land
(No!) No man is an island
Who owns my days
Who loves, who pays?

[Bridge]
Whoa woe, oh oh (hope so)

[Verse 2]
Is man’s primary role
To rule and take control
Does he understand….
(Who’s in command)

[Chorus]
Is this island an I land
(No!) No man is an island
Who owns my days
Who loves, who pays?

[Bridge]
Whoa woe, oh oh (hope so)

[Verse 3]
How can we survive
Stay alive and thrive
If we’re out to destroy
(All that we enjoy)

[Chorus]
Is this island an I land
(No!) No man is an island
Who owns my days
Who loves, who pays?

[Outro]
Whoa woe, oh oh (hope so)
Whoa woe, oh oh (hope so)

From the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSpray

Spray-Pt-1.mp3
Spray-Pt-1.mp4
Spray-Pt-2.mp3
Spray-Pt-2.mp4
Spray-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
In need (of cooling off)
Indeed (please don’t scoff)
The degree (is way too hot)
Set me free (Oh, please, why not?)

[Chorus]
(Hey!) Feel the reggae spray
(This way)
Say! Real is the day
(OK?) OK!

[Verse 2]
Concede (to cooling off)
We need (humanity’s in a trough)
The temperature (is too extreme)
Are you sure (you know what I mean)

[Chorus]
(Hey!) Feel the reggae spray
(This way)
Say! Real is the day
(OK?) OK!

[Bridge]
Hey, hey (spray away)
Hey, hey (seize the day)
We say (make it OK)
Take responsibility
(For our brought on reality)

[Chorus]
(Hey!) Feel the reggae spray
(This way)
Say! Real is the day
(OK?) OK!

[Outro[
We can save the day
(Right this way)

From the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderRock n’

Rock-n-0.mp3
Rock-n-0.mp4
Rock-n-1.mp3
Rock-n-1.mp4
Rock-n-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Is it time to get serious
(Stone cold sober)
Shed the veneer of delirious
(Sold soul robber)

[Chorus]
Steer clear (toward the light)
Not too far left (or to the right)
Head straight (into the light)
Our dreams are in sight (insight)

[Verse 2]
Is it time to get stone (cold) sober
(Like a rock)
Before it’s too late (as in over)
Start the clock

[Chorus]
Steer clear (toward the light)
Not too far left (or to the right)
Head straight (into the light)
Our dreams are in sight (insight)

Are you ready to do some rockin’
(Rock n’ roll, baby, roll)
’cause the sun’s goin’ down
(Time to send some sound around)

[Chorus 2]
We’re here (in the light)
Oh, we’re hear (in delight)
Pure white light (all’s alright)
Our dreams are in sight (insight)

[Outro]
In sight tonight
Insight to night

From the album “Roll

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderOver

Roll-1.mp3
Roll-1.mp4
Roll-2.mp3
Roll-2.mp4
Roll-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Roll me over…
I’m not dead yet
All I need is some tenderness

[Verse 2]
Roll me over…
We’ll forget neglect
Get together for togetherness

[Chorus]
We hear you loud and clear
(Spread love far and near)
Below and above (shout!) love
(Over and out)

[Bridge]
Roll me over (and out)
Over (and out)
No, I’m not dead yet
To avoid any regret
Hope to never forget
(… I’m not dead yet)

[Verse 3]
Roll me over…
I’m not dead yet
All I need is to seize the scene

[Verse 4]
Roll me over
And let me set
True the seen of our dream

[Chorus]
We hear you loud and clear
(Spread love far and near)
Below and above (shout!) love
(Over and out)

[Bridge]
Roll me over (and out)
Over (and out)
No, I’m not dead yet
To avoid any regret
Hope to never forget
(… I’m not dead yet)

[Chorus]
We hear you loud and clear
(Spread love far and near)
Below and above (shout!) love
(Over and out)

[Outro]
Roll me over (and out)
Over (and out)

From the album “Roll

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderCarefree

Carefree-I.mp3
Carefree-I.mp4
Carefree-II.mp3
Carefree-II.mp4
Carefree-Reggae.mp3
Carefree-Reggae.mp4
Carefree-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp3
Carefree-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp4
Carefree-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Happy to be
Carefree
Happily
Carefree
Destined to be
Happy
If you live life
Carefree

[Chorus]
It’ll start (from the heart)
When you let the love (go)
Once love (moves to depart)
That’s when care is free (to flow)

[Verse 2]
On the road to
Carefree
Feel it… do you?
Carefree
I can see in front of me
Oh, so clearly
Live life without strife
Carefree

[Chorus]
It’ll start (from the heart)
When you let the love (go)
Once love (moves to depart)
That’s when care is free (to flow)

[Bridge]
Give music and dance (a chance)
Free! (Free care)
Where? (Right there)
Free! (Free care)
Where? (Everywhere)
Give the world a giant embrace
(Set the pace)

[Chorus]
It’ll start (from the heart)
When you let the love (go)
Once love (moves to depart)
That’s when care is free (to flow)

[Outro]
Give music and dance (a chance)
Dance!

From the album “Roll

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

bookmark_borderRoll

Roll-1.mp3
Roll-1.mp4
Roll-2.mp3
Roll-2.mp4
Roll-intro.mp3

[Intro]
And, roll…

[Verse 1]
Come on, you know
It’s time to go
Well past prime time
Humor is droll

[Bridge]
So, roll

[Chorus]
Roll with the punches
(Roll with the changes)
No more free lunches
(Oh, strange it is)

[Verse 2]
Hey now, awaken
Feeling quite shaken
Overstayed our welcome
“Please come again”

[Bridge]
Rollin’

[Chorus]
Roll with the punches
(Roll with the changes)
No more free lunches
(Oh, strange it is)

[Outro]
Goal: roll

From the album “Roll

bookmark_borderTied Up and Blue

Tied-Up-and-Blue.mp3
Tied-Up-and-Blue.mp4
Tied-Up-and-Blue-Reggae.mp3
Tied-Up-and-Blue-Reggae.mp4
Tied-Up-and-Blue-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
I can’t pick up the phone
(I’m tied up and blue)
… thinking of you

[Verse 2]
Stuck here all alone
(I’m tied up and blue)
… thinking of you

[Bridge]
Here’s what you can do
(Pull me through)

[Chorus]
We can change
The situation
Rearrange
Through stimulation
With a spark from the heart…
(Start)

[Verse 1]
Laid prone in a zone…
I can’t pick up the phone
As a matter of fact…
Can’t message ya back

[Verse 2]
Stuck here all alone
(I’m tied up and blue)
… thinking of you
(All tied up and blue)

[Bridge]
Here’s what you can do
(Pull me through)

[Chorus]
We can change
The situation
Rearrange
Through stimulation
With a spark from the heart…
(Start)

[Outro]
Start the heart
(Spark!)

From the album “Tumultuous Times

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderThunder Gods

Thunder-Gods-0.mp3
Thunder-Gods-0.mp4
Thunder-Gods-1.mp3
Thunder-Gods-1.mp4
Thunder-Gods-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(God) Thunder Gods!

[Verse 1]
Has it really come to this…
Mother Nature’s pissed
She puts out the call
To all:

[Bridge]
Thunder Gods,
Humanity’s at odds!

[Chorus]
Let your thunder bolt (jolt!)
Set the world on fire (take it higher)
The wonder (of rolling thunder)
Time they’re told it’s dire (Fire, fire!)

[Bridge]
(God) Thunder Gods!

[Verse 2]
Would you look at where we are
Do you find it bizarre
We’ve taken things to far
Causing harm (sound the alarm!)

[Bridge]
Thunder Gods,
Humanity’s at odds!

[Chorus]
Let your thunder bolt (jolt!)
Set the world on fire (take it higher)
The wonder (of rolling thunder)
Time they’re told it’s dire (Fire, fire!)

[Outro]
Thunder Gods,
Against the odds!
(Oh, my god!)

ABOUT THE SONG
Across many mythologies, thunder is a symbol of divine power, often tied to the sky, storms, and lightning. Thunder gods are typically seen as mighty, commanding, and sometimes fearsome figures.

In Indo-European traditions, the thunder god is often the ruler of the pantheon—such as Indra in Hinduism, Zeus in Greek mythology, Perun in Slavic lore, and Thor in Norse tales. In ancient Egypt, Set (or Seth) embodied storms and chaos, while Illapa, the Inca god of thunder, was a warrior spirit of the mountains. In Japan, Raijin created thunder and lightning by striking drums, a fierce presence in the skies.

This song channels the fury of these gods as a metaphor for Mother Nature’s growing wrath in response to humanity’s reckless destruction of the planet. The storm is no longer just myth—it’s here, and it’s real.

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderChaos on a Leash

Chaos-on-a-Leash-0.mp3
Chaos-on-a-Leash-0.mp4
Chaos-on-a-Leash-1.mp3
Chaos-on-a-Leash-1.mp4
Chaos-on-a-Leash-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Took the dog for a walk
All was going swell
Until a squirrel… starts a stalk
Oh, well, what the hell

[Chorus]
Chaos (unleashed)
Such a beast
Chaos (unleashed)
Devil’s feast

[Bridge]
You got that right
(Better hold on tight!)
Dog gone! (out of sight)
Say goodnight

[Verse 2]
Took the dog for a stroll
On a lark in the park
Sees a squirrel… goes on patrol
Like gasoline to a spark

[Chorus]
Chaos (unleashed)
Such a beast
Chaos (unleashed)
Devil’s feast

[Bridge]
You got that right
(Better hold on tight!)
Dog gone! (out of sight)
Say goodnight

[Chorus]
Chaos (unleashed)
Such a beast
Chaos (unleashed)
Devil’s feast

[Outro]
You got that right
(Better hold on tight!)
Say goodnight
(Goodnight)

ABOUT THE SONG
The song “Chaos on a Leash” uses the seemingly light-hearted act of walking a dog to deliver a biting metaphor about the disorder unleashed by President Trump’s economic and climate policies. What begins as a normal stroll—orderly, manageable—rapidly descends into chaos the moment a stimulus (the squirrel) appears, symbolizing the reckless triggers embedded in policy decisions that escalate into runaway consequences.

Verse 1 and 2
Taking the dog for a walk represents governing a nation or managing an economy—a process that requires attention, foresight, and restraint. The dog is a stand-in for the forces of the economy, environmental risk, and public reaction. The squirrel—a minor provocation—sets off an unpredictable reaction, showing how fragile and reactive our systems have become. It only takes a spark (“like gasoline to a spark”) to ignite disorder, mirroring how small decisions under Trump’s leadership (e.g., deregulation, tax cuts, environmental rollbacks) can have explosive effects.

Chorus
“Chaos (unleashed) / Such a beast / Devil’s feast” captures the full unraveling. Once these forces are let loose—like markets without checks, or nature reacting to climate abuse—there’s no putting them back on the leash. The “devil’s feast” implies self-destruction: profiteering, environmental degradation, and worsening inequality that feed on themselves.

Bridge
The command “Better hold on tight!” acknowledges that those under this leadership must brace for impact—there’s no steering mechanism, only reactive damage control. “Dog gone! Out of sight!” suggests Trump has lost control over the very forces he claims to master, including inflation, climate instability, and civil unrest. The refrain “Say goodnight” is a warning: if this chaos isn’t restrained, it may be lights out for democracy, stability, or even habitable climate systems.

Overall Metaphor
Just as a distracted dog-walker fails to prevent chaos in the park, the Trump administration is portrayed as oblivious or complicit in letting dangerous forces run wild. Economic greed, deregulation, and climate denial are off the leash, leaving Americans to suffer the consequences. The song doesn’t just describe chaos—it warns us: we’ve seen it coming, and still failed to hold on.

A SCIENCE NOTE

The song “Chaos on a Leash” illustrates chaos theory in both its literal narrative and its metaphorical implications. Chaos theory deals with how small changes in initial conditions can lead to vastly different and unpredictable outcomes—often referred to as the butterfly effect.

Application of Chaos Theory to the Song:

  • The Setup (Initial Conditions):
    A peaceful walk with a dog represents a stable, orderly system. Everything seems under control.

  • The Trigger (Small Perturbation):
    The sudden appearance of a squirrel is a minor event—but it completely destabilizes the situation. This is the “butterfly flapping its wings” moment. The squirrel is a catalyst that causes a rapid shift in behavior.

  • The Outcome (Nonlinear Escalation):
    The dog bolts. Chaos ensues. A small input (a squirrel) leads to a disproportionate and uncontrollable output (the unleashed frenzy). This echoes the nonlinear, unpredictable behavior central to chaos theory.

  • Irreversibility & Sensitivity:
    Once the dog is gone, the system can’t be reset easily—mirroring how chaotic systems are often irreversible and highly sensitive to initial conditions. The line “Dog gone! (out of sight) / Say goodnight” reinforces the idea of control being permanently lost.

Metaphorical Layer:

As a metaphor for Trump’s economic and climate policies, the dog represents a nation or planet on a leash—barely restrained. The squirrel is a policy trigger or deregulation move that seems small or innocuous but unleashes irreversible consequences. The chaos that follows reflects the sensitive dependence on initial conditions—a hallmark of chaotic systems like ecosystems, climate, and global markets.

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderGate

Gate-1.mp3
Gate-1.mp4
Gate-2.mp3
Gate-2.mp4
Gate-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Knowing that your gate
(Determines your fate)
Open the inside wide
(And stride)

[Verse 1]
At what rate
Do you participate
Is your gait
Set to procrastinate

[Chorus]
The gait of your stride
(Open ‘er up oh so wide)
The gate on your pride
(Close ‘er down from the inside)

[Bridge]
Pick up the pace
Of removing our trace
Raise your head high
(Let out a sigh)
Yours is no disgrace

[Verse 2]
Out of your gated community
And you will see…
Society can live in harmony
Create and own reality

[Chorus]
The gait of your stride
(Open ‘er up oh so wide)
The gate to your pride
(Close ‘er down from the inside)

[Bridge]
Pick up the pace
Of removing our trace
Raise your head high
(Let out a sigh)
Yours is no disgrace

[Chorus]
The gait of your stride
(Open ‘er up oh so wide)
The gate to your pride
(Close ‘er down from the inside)

[Outro]
Knowing that your gait
(Determines your fate)
Open the inside wide
(And stride)

ABOUT THE SONG
1. Gate – a hinged barrier used to close an opening in a wall, fence, or cage
2. Gait – a person’s manner of walking, stepping, or running

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderUproarious

Uproarious-0.mp3
Uproarious-0.mp4
Uproarious-1.mp3
Uproarious-1.mp4
Uproarious-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Have we found enough sound
To get around
Have we made the choice
To raise our voice

[Chorus]
Let’s make today
Uproarious
Seeing how the day
Is glorious
(Get outrageous)

[Bridge]
Raise the praise
(Poised to make noise!)
Out from under a black cloud
(Sing out loud)

[Verse 2]
How can we get along
In song
Can we really be
In harmony

[Chorus]
Let’s make today
Uproarious
Seeing how the day
Is glorious
(Get outrageous)

[Bridge]
Raise the praise
(Poised to make noise!)
Out from under a black cloud
(Sing out loud)

[Chorus]
Let’s make today
Uproarious
Seeing how the day
Is glorious
(Get outrageous)

[Outro]
Feeling fabulous
(Come along with us)
Get outrageous

From the album “Tumultuous Times

bookmark_borderGolden Age

Golden-Age-0.mp3
Golden-Age-0.mp4
Golden-Age-1.mp3
Golden-Age-1.mp4
Golden-Age-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Living in the Golden Age
Abundance (we dance)
Giving away outrage
(If it’s our last chance)

[Chorus]
Way more than we need
(Let’s give some away)
Let the hungry feed
(Live to see another day)

[Verse 2]
Living in the Golden Age
There’s no need (for greed)
Never really knew a shortage
(Time to do a good deed)

[Chorus]
Way more than we need
(Let’s give some away)
Let the hungry feed
(Live to see another day)

[Bridge]
It’s the Golden Age (of rock n’ roll)
All the world’s our stage (sound is our role)
It’s the Golden Age (of rock n’ roll)
All the world’s our stage (love is our goal)
It’s the Golden Age… right here and now!
(Hope we all don’t miss it somehow)

[Chorus]
Way more than we need
(Let’s give some away)
Let the hungry feed
(Live to see another day)

[Outro]
It’s the Golden Age (of rock n’ roll)
All the world’s our stage (love is our goal)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Golden Age” critiques the deep irony of declaring a new era of American greatness under President Trump while ignoring how our prosperity continues to fuel the very crises that threaten our survival, especially the climate crisis. Despite living in one of the most materially abundant periods in history, we continue to act with short-sightedness, entitlement, and neglect. Music, particularly rock and roll, is presented as a counterforce—a solution that speaks truth, unites people, and rekindles empathy.

Verse 1 sets up the contradiction. “Living in the Golden Age” acknowledges that we already enjoy immense wealth and opportunity. Yet instead of acting responsibly or generously, we “give away outrage”—suggesting we waste our energy on division and denial. The parenthetical line, “If it’s our last chance,” warns that time is running out to change course, likely referencing the narrowing window to prevent irreversible climate damage.

The chorus delivers a moral challenge: we have more than enough, so “let’s give some away.” It calls for redistributing resources and care—“let the hungry feed”—as a path to collective survival. This stands in stark contrast to the extractive, deregulatory, and climate-indifferent policies of the Trump administration.

Verse 2 reinforces that the real crisis is not scarcity but greed. The line “Never really knew a shortage” underscores how insulated many Americans are from global suffering and environmental precarity. Instead of hoarding, the song urges us to act: “Time to do a good deed.”

The instrumental bridge represents the emotional and cultural power of music. These solos are a kind of nonverbal resistance—music becomes a voice for truth, unity, and conscience where political leadership has failed.

The bridge lyrics declare this moment as the “Golden Age of rock n’ roll,” reclaiming the spirit of music as activism. “All the world’s our stage” reframes our global role: not to dominate, but to lead with heart. The line “Hope we all don’t miss it somehow” warns that if we don’t shift focus—from profit and politics to compassion and sustainability—we risk losing everything that makes this age “golden.”

The final chorus and outro return to the themes of abundance, responsibility, and love as the true goals of this age. It ends with a vision where the tools to save ourselves—empathy, music, and collective action—are already in our hands.

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderFunny Bone

Funny-Bone-1.mp3
Funny-Bone-1.mp4
Funny-Bone-2.mp3
Funny-Bone-2.mp4
Funny-Bone-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Of all the nerve!
I have a bone to pick with you
Throwin’ a verbal swerve
When the verbiage just ain’t true

[Chorus]
Hitting the funny bone
(Listening to the moan)
It’s not that funny at all
(Doesn’t represent the call)

[Bridge]
Honey, if you think pain is funny
(You better think again)
Reigning on days that were sunny
(Just look where you’ve been)

[Verse 2]
A strange, tingling shock
Shook my foundation’s rock
The “last meal” to serve
Of all the nerve (ulnar nerve)

[Chorus]
Hitting the funny bone
(Listening to the moan)
It’s not that funny at all
(Doesn’t represent the call)

[Bridge]
Honey, if you think pain is funny
(You better think again)
Reigning on days that were sunny
(Just look where you’ve been)

[Chorus]
Hitting the funny bone
(Listening to the moan)
It’s not that funny at all
(Doesn’t represent the call)

[Outro]
Honey, if you think pain is funny
(You better put away your money)

A SCIENCE NOTE: The “Funny Bone” Isn’t a Bone at All

Despite its name, the “funny bone” isn’t a bone — it’s actually a nerve. Specifically, it’s the ulnar nerve, one of the three main nerves in your arm. This nerve originates in your spinal cord, travels down through your neck and shoulder, and continues all the way through the inner part of your elbow, into your forearm, and finally to your hand, where it connects to your pinky and ring fingers (the fourth and fifth digits).

The term “funny bone” typically refers to the spot at the back of your elbow where the ulnar nerve passes very close to the surface of the skin, just beside the humerus bone. When you bump this area, the nerve gets compressed against the bone, producing a strange, tingling or electric-shock-like sensation — often accompanied by temporary numbness in your fingers. That odd feeling is what gives the funny bone its misleading name.

The ulnar nerve plays a crucial role in your ability to feel and control movement in part of your hand. It carries sensory information from your pinky and the outer half of your ring finger back to your brain and helps control some of the fine motor movements in your hand.

So, the next time you hit your “funny bone,” you’re actually irritating a major nerve — and there’s nothing funny about that!

From the album “Tumultuous Times