bookmark_borderRough Sees

Rough-Sees-1.mp3
Rough-Sees-1.mp4
Rough-Sees-2.mp3
Rough-Sees-2.mp4
Rough-Sees-intro.mp3

[Refrain]
Look out
(Turbulent)
Find out
(What’s meant)

[Bridge]
(Oh, please!)
Rough sees

[Refrain]
Look out
(Turbulent)
Find out
(What’s meant)

[Bridge]
Look at all these rough seas
(Oh, please!)
Rough sees

[Refrain]
Look out
(Turbulent)
Find out
(What’s meant)

[Bridge]
Look at all these rough seas
(Oh, please!)
Zoonotic disease
(Oh, please!)
Dying trees
(Oh, please!)
Rough sees

[Outro]
(Oh, please!)
Rough sees

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderOut There

Out-There.mp3
Out-There.mp4
Out-There-Reggae.mp3
Out-There-Reggae.mp4
Out-There-intro.mp3

[Intro]
It’s a jungle! (Out there)
Beware (air, air, air)

[Verse 1]
Where to begin?
The atmosphere near
My skin… wearin’ thin
(So is my skin)

[Break]
It’s a jungle! (Out there)
Beware (air, air, air)
Unaware (there’s none there)

[Chorus]
Don’t want to go through lack of oxygen
Again… (not not again)
Don’t want to believe I can’t breathe
(All will seize)
Set us free
(From humanity’s disease)

[Bridge]
The need for greed
Indeed, freed…
(No need for greed)

[Verse 2]
Here we are… once again
How bizarre… chagrin
My skin… wearin’ thin
(So is within)

[Break]
It’s a jungle! (Out there)
Beware (air, air, air)
Unaware (there’s none there)

[Chorus]
Don’t want to go through lack of oxygen
Again… (not not again)
Don’t want to believe I can’t breathe
(All will seize)
Set us free
(From humanity’s disease)

[Outro]
The need for greed
Indeed, freed…
(No need for greed)

From the album “Tumultuous Times

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderHighway to Hell

Highway-to-Hell.mp3
Highway-to-Hell.mp4
Highway-to-Hell-Reggae.mp3
Highway-to-Hell-Reggae.mp4
Highway-to-Hell-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Well, welcome… come…
(Ride the highway to hell)

[Verse 1]
The collapse of capitalism
Is causing a schism
Between love and hate
… the irate…
And, wisdom

[Bridge]
Well, welcome… come…
(Ride the highway to hell)
Where you reside
(You hide your inside)

[Chorus]
If only to get out
(Have you come to free freedom?)
Out of the cage of our rage
(Free us from our free dumb)

[Bridge]
Dum (ditty, ditty)… ditty dumb
(Doodle dandy)
Doodle dumb

[Verse 2]
The collapse of capitalism
Is causing a schism
Between the embrace
… Of race…
And, whose “kingdom”

[Bridge]
Well, welcome… come…
(Ride the highway to hell)
Where you reside
(You hide your inside)

[Chorus]
If only to get out
(Have you come to free freedom?)
Out of the cage of our rage
(Free us from our free dumb)

[Bridge]
Dum (ditty, ditty)… ditty dumb
(Doodle dandy)
Doodle dumb
(Watching the fall)
Of your all
(The fall of your all)

[Outro]
Falling down
(All around)
Down, ditty, down, do, too
(Due to)

Climate Collapse Will Break Capitalism

Broken: Deviation, Cracked Fractals, Climate, and Economics

The Decline of Economic Power and the Ascent of Environmental Reality

The Destructive Legacy of Trump’s Climate and Economic Policies

From the album “Tumultuous Times

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderTo Tomorrow

To-Tomorrow.mp3
To-Tomorrow.mp4
To-Tomorrow-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp3
To-Tomorrow-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp4
To-Tomorrow-intro.mp3

[Intro]
To tomorrow…

[Verse 1]
At the end of the day
What do you say
Let’s raise a drink
(“To tomorrow”)

[Verse 2]
After our long day
It’s OK to say
“Let’s raise a drink”
(“To tomorrow”)

[Chorus]
What do you think
Of our situation
Raise a drink
In celebration
(Of love’s propagation)

[Verse 3]
Another day put away
Together we’re on our way
Let’s raise a drink
(“To tomorrow”)

[Verse 4]
Drown your sorrow
Here’s to tomorrow
The house shall drink
(“To tomorrow”)

[Chorus]
What do you think
Of our situation
Raise a drink
In celebration
(Of love’s propagation)

[Bridge]
Raise you glass high above
(“A toast to love!”)
A toast to the most
(Love, love, love)
Together (me and you)
Can weather it through
(“To tomorrow”)

[Chorus]
What do you think
Of our situation
Raise a drink
(“To tomorrow”)
In celebration
(Of love’s propagation)

[Outro]
Hate hate…
(Let love propagate!)
To tomorrow.

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderClocked

Clocked-0.mp3
Clocked-0.mp4
Clocked-1.mp3
Clocked-1.mp4
Clocked-2.mp3
Clocked-2.mp4
Clocked-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp3
Clocked-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp4
Clocked-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(Shout!) “Is it time to punch out?”

[Verse 1]
Is your time running down
(Just look around)
As you clock is winding down
(Down, down, down)

[Break]
(Shout!) “Is it time to punch out?”
Whoa, no I ain’t done
(“Is it time to punch out?”)
Whoa, know I’m in for some….

[Chorus 1]
Has your clock been rocked
(Tick tock)
Has your rock been clocked
(Take stock)
Alive enough to roll the goal
(Long live rock!)

[Verse 2]
Are your days numbered
(Become all the number)
As you clock is counting down
(Down, down, down)

[Chorus 2]
Has your clock been rocked
(Tick tock)
Sound will unlock your clock
(Take stock)
Free enough to roll the goal
(Long live rock!)

[Bridge, Vocal Harmony]
Upon our rock
(Long live rock!)
Hear the knock
(Long live rock!)
Open the door
(And love some more)

[Chorus 3]
Now our clocks wound tight
(New insight)
We’ll keep up the fight
(Knew in sight)
Free enough to roll the goal
(Long live rock!)

[Outro]
Upon our rock
(Long live rock!)
Hear her knock
(Long live rock!)
Open the door
(And love some more)

ABOUT THE SONG
“Clocked” uses the metaphor of time, music, and Earth itself—referred to as the “3rd rock from the sun”—to express a message of urgency, resilience, and the need to reconnect with the living planet in the face of the climate crisis.

In the first verse, the lyrics point to the sense that Earth’s time—and ours—is running out. Environmental destruction and global warming are accelerating, and it’s visible all around us. The repeated line about the clock “winding down” emphasizes a downward spiral we may be in if we don’t act.

In the break, the question “Is it time to punch out?” represents the temptation to give up or ignore the crisis. But the speaker resists that idea, declaring that there’s still time to act and that the fight isn’t over.

The chorus plays with the double meaning of the word “rock”—referring both to the Earth and to rock music. “Has your clock been rocked?” suggests both a sense of urgency (tick tock) and the idea that our world has been hit hard by human actions. The line “sound will unlock your clock” suggests that awareness, or perhaps a literal call to action through sound (music, alarms, voices), can shake people awake. “Long live rock” is a tribute not only to rock music but also to the resilience of Earth itself.

In the bridge, Earth is portrayed as a conscious being. The line “Hear the knock” implies that the planet is trying to get our attention—through wildfires, floods, and other signs of distress. “Open the door and love some more” is a call to let empathy, care, and action back into our lives before it’s too late.

The third chorus shifts into a more hopeful tone. Rather than winding down, the clock is now “wound tight”—we are recharged and more focused. With “new insight” and clarity, we continue the fight to protect the planet.

Finally, the outro reaffirms the Earth’s call and the need for a heartfelt response. Earth is knocking; we must listen and respond with love, action, and responsibility.

In summary, “Clocked” is a creative and urgent message about Earth’s living presence, the time we have left, and the need to act decisively and lovingly to preserve our future.

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderWhich Crisis is This

Which-Crisis-is-This-1.mp3
Which-Crisis-is-This-1.mp4
Which-Crisis-is-This-2.mp3
Which-Crisis-is-This-2.mp4
Which-Crisis-is-This-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Which crisis is this? (is this is)
Crises (crisis) crises

[Verse 1]
The antithesis of bliss
Aimed for heaven (a miss)
Amiss in ego (ya know)
If I were to confess…
Amassed a mess

[Bridge]
Which crisis is this? (is this is)

[Chorus]
Whether it’s the weather
Or the gore of war
(No more!)
Can’t reside in genocide
Or the bad habitat habit
(F it!)

[Bridge]
Which crisis is this? (is this is)

[Verse 2]
Is this the reaper’s kiss
(Smells of death on her breath)
Standing in our vinegar and piss
(Self-loathing exposing)
On the midst (with clenched fists)

[Bridge]
Which crisis is this? (is this is)

[Chorus]
Whether it’s the weather
Or the gore of war
(No more!)
Can’t reside in genocide
Or the bad habitat habit
(F it!)

[Bridge]
Which crisis is this? (is this is)

[Outro]
Which crisis is this? (is this is)
Crises (crisis) crises

ABOUT THE SONG
May 3, 2025 — The current economic outlook is defined by a climate of short-term uncertainty paired with an emerging long-term certainty—though not of the reassuring kind. Recent GDP data show the U.S. economy contracting in the first quarter of 2025, signaling the beginning of a potential recession. However, these numbers do not tell the full story. Much of the apparent contraction is due to front-loaded inventory buildup ahead of “Liberation Day,” when businesses sought to avoid potential tariff hikes and logistical disruptions. These goods were stored in bonded warehouses, where the economic activity isn’t fully recorded in the current quarter, leading to misleading signals about the true pace of economic activity.

This distortion is likely to reverse itself in the second quarter, with GDP numbers appearing stronger than the actual underlying growth. The result is a volatile and misleading picture of the economy, compounded by the fact that GDP is a lagging indicator and does not fully capture the complex dynamics now at play.

Another significant distortion arises in the employment numbers, which are increasingly unreliable as a barometer of economic health. The dramatic reduction in immigrant students and workers—due in large part to renewed anti-immigration policies under Trump—has left critical gaps in labor supply. At the same time, AI adoption is reshaping the labor force in ways economists and policymakers are only beginning to grasp. These two forces together may create the illusion of rising productivity and stable employment, even as large segments of the labor market experience underemployment or displacement. The headline figures fail to capture the precarious nature of this transition, masking the deeper structural weaknesses in the economy.

This combination of distorted economic indicators, labor market shifts, and geopolitical instability is creating an environment of extreme volatility across both equity and bond markets. Investors are whipsawed between overinflated optimism and abrupt corrections, as markets test both recent highs and lows in search of clarity that may not come anytime soon.

Looking ahead, the short-term chaos may soon give way to long-term certainty—but not of the positive variety. The looming expiration of the pause on reciprocal tariffs is likely to be a key turning point. If tariffs are reinstated, the economic slowdown will likely accelerate sharply, pushing the economy deeper into contraction. Even if new trade deals are negotiated or existing tariffs are reduced, the damage may already be irreversible. The current “paused” state has left an effective average tariff rate of roughly 35%—among the highest in U.S. history—cementing a legacy of protectionism and economic isolation. Whether officially reinstated or not, these trade policies have already disrupted global supply chains, damaged relationships with key trading partners, and raised costs across the board for American businesses and consumers.

What’s more, the tariff wars have shifted attention away from two equally consequential and economically damaging forces: immigration policy and climate inaction. The continued restriction of immigration undermines the U.S. economy’s primary growth engine—population expansion. In a system structurally dependent on demographic growth, a stagnant or shrinking labor force spells long-term decline.

Even more critical is the rapidly accelerating climate breakdown. The economic costs of climate change are no longer theoretical—they are now driving up the cost of insurance, threatening the affordability and availability of housing, and resulting in billions of dollars in losses from increasingly frequent and severe weather events. These pressures are now embedded in the inflationary dynamics of the economy and will only intensify over time, especially in the absence of effective mitigation policies.

In summary, the U.S. economy is facing a double bind. In the short term, distorted data and unpredictable policies are creating extreme volatility and confusion. In the long term, deeper structural problems—trade isolationism, demographic stagnation, and unchecked climate risk—are converging to produce a future of sustained economic decline unless there is a fundamental shift in direction. The certainty we face is not one of stability or growth, but of the consequences of inaction and misdirection.

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderWet Your Finger

Wet-Your-Finger-0.mp3
Wet-Your-Finger-0.mp4
Wet-Your-Finger-1.mp3
Wet-Your-Finger-1.mp4
Wet-Your-Finger-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Wet your finger
Stick it in the air
Let it linger
Find direction there

[Bridge]
Then you’ll know

[Chorus]
Which way the wind blows
(How it goes)
If it grows dark
(Looking stark)
Or if the skies clear
(And the light shines here)

[Bridge]
May the rays (fill your days)
Along our way we know…
(Which way the winds blow)

[Verse 2]
See our flag waver blowing
Knowing which way he blows
Listening carefully
We’ll see what floats free

[Bridge]
Then we’ll know

[Chorus]
Which way the wind blows
(How it goes)
If it grows dark
(Looking stark)
Or if the skies clear
(And the light shines here)

[Bridge]
May the rays (fill your days)
Along our way we know…
(Which way the winds blow)
Happiness flows
(Any way the wind blows)

[Outro]
(Yes!) Happiness flows
(Any way the wind blows)
Here goes….

A SCIENCE NOTE

“Wet Your Finger” is a metaphorical song that urges listeners to tune into the subtle, everyday signs around them—just like the old trick of wetting your finger to sense the wind direction. In a world overwhelmed by noise, data, and denial, the song calls for a return to common sense and observation. It’s about recognizing the clear and present signals nature is giving us—signals of imbalance, disruption, and change. By using a simple gesture as a symbol, the song draws attention to the fact that the evidence of the climate crisis is already all around us: in the hotter days, stronger storms, shifting seasons, and rising seas. All we have to do is look, feel, and acknowledge what the Earth is plainly telling us.

About Verse 2

The second verse features a layered play on words, blending literal and figurative meanings. The “flag waver” refers not only to someone holding an actual flag—used to detect wind direction—but also to political figures or pundits who shift their positions based on prevailing opinion. The line “knowing which way he blows” is a nod to opportunism, echoing how some politicians or influencers adjust their stance with the political wind, especially on climate issues. The verse critiques this performative behavior while suggesting that if we “listen carefully,” we can discern what’s genuine and what simply “floats free”—a metaphor for misinformation or empty rhetoric drifting untethered from truth and whether you are truly free when you deny science.

Here are several basic, low-tech ways to determine wind direction:

  1. Wetting your finger: As you mentioned, wet your finger and hold it up in the air. The side that feels cooler is the side facing into the wind, as evaporation causes cooling.

  2. Watching smoke or steam: Observe the direction that smoke from a fire or steam from a kettle drifts. It will follow the wind.

  3. Observing flags or leaves: Look at the way flags, leaves, or grass are blowing. The direction they are being pushed toward is the direction the wind is blowing to; the wind comes from the opposite direction.

  4. Using a blade of grass: Hold a thin blade of grass lightly between your fingers and let it go—it will blow away with the wind. The direction it travels is the wind’s direction.

  5. Floating dust or dandelion seeds: Toss some dust, grass clippings, or dandelion seeds into the air. Watch which way they drift.

  6. Licking the back of your hand: Similar to the finger trick, but the back of your hand is more sensitive to temperature changes.

  7. Listening carefully: Sometimes, especially in wooded or grassy areas, you can hear the wind before you feel it and use sound to estimate direction.

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderPlease Accompany Me

Please-Accompany-Me.mp3
Please-Accompany-Me.mp4
Please-Accompany-Me-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp3
Please-Accompany-Me-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp4
Please-Accompany-Me-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
In these tumultuous times
I’m glad to know your kind
Brings to mind… my hope in you…
That you bring to me in harmony

[Bridge]
(Through and through)
Hear we

[Chorus]
Here we are (accompany me)
Let’s see how far (we can carry)
A tune (in harmony)
How soon (humanity)

[Verse 2]
In these tumultuous times
I’m glad to find your kind
Brings to mind… time in rhyme
“One more song!” sung among

[Bridge]
(Sweet harmony)
Hear we

[Chorus]
Here we are (accompany me)
Let’s see how far (we can carry)
A tune (in harmony)
How soon (humanity)

[Outro]
In these tumultuous times
I’m glad to hear you’re here
(Chimes)

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderTumultuous Times

Tumultuous-Times-0.mp3
Tumultuous-Times-0.mp4
Tumultuous-Times-1.mp3
Tumultuous-Times-1.mp4
Tumultuous-Times-2.mp3
Tumultuous-Times-2.mp4
Tumultuous-Times-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
What time is it?
(Time to check where you’re at)
What time is it?
(Time to check your habitat)

[Bridge]
Living in tumultuous times
(Man upon man crimes)

[Chorus]
Does the state of our politics
(Make you sick)
Pollution’s getting much too thick
(Need more music)

[Bridge]
Let the hope in sound
(Be found)

[Verse 2]
What time is it?
(Time to check who’s our king)
What time is it?
(Time to check our rate of sinking)

[Bridge]
Living in tumultuous times
(Man upon man crimes)

[Chorus]
Does the state of our politics
(Make you sick)
Pollution’s getting much too thick
(Need more music)

[Bridge]
Let the hope in sound
(Be found)

[Outro]
The hope in sound is found
(All around)

ABOUT THE SONG

The song “Tumultuous Times” is a powerful reflection on the dual crises of the Trump presidency’s economic and environmental policies, using music as both diagnosis and medicine. It conveys a sense of urgency, chaos, and moral decay—while holding out a fragile hope through collective awareness and artistic resistance.

 Climate Crisis and Environmental Deregulation:

  • “What time is it? / Time to check your habitat” directly references the state of the planet. Under Trump, environmental protections were rolled back at unprecedented rates—national parks were opened to drilling, and the U.S. withdrew from the Paris Climate Accord. The line asks the listener to take stock of their physical surroundings, implying they are now in danger.

  • “Pollution’s getting much too thick” is literal. Air, water, and atmospheric degradation intensified under loosened EPA enforcement. The song links that to moral suffocation—pollution as both a physical and spiritual condition.

Economic Chaos and Political Corruption:

  • “Time to check who’s our king” is a clear allusion to Trump’s authoritarian tendencies and self-comparisons to monarchs or “chosen ones.” It critiques the erosion of democratic norms and the consolidation of power under a populist strongman.

  • “Time to check our rate of sinking” fuses economic instability with climate-induced collapse. It evokes both rising sea levels and the sinking credibility or moral compass of the nation.

  • “Man upon man crimes” highlights escalating division—racial violence, political aggression, insurrectionist threats—all intensified by the policies and rhetoric of Trump-era politics.

Hope as Resistance:

  • “Let the hope in sound / be found” acts as a call to artists, musicians, and truth-tellers. It suggests that amid the noise and corruption, truth still resonates in honest expression. The song doesn’t deny the crisis, but it insists on the power of collective voice and conscience.

  • “Need more music” is both metaphorical and literal. It suggests we need more soul, harmony, and shared rhythm in our politics and environmental actions—a return to human values over greed and destruction.

 Summary:

Tumultuous Times” serves as a protest anthem against Trump-era policies that deepened environmental degradation and political decay. It asks listeners to wake up, recognize the stakes, and respond through awareness and action—while holding tight to hope through art and community.

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

From the album “Tumultuous Times

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderWalking on the Sun

Walking-on-the-Sun-0.mp3
Walking-on-the-Sun-0.mp4
Walking-on-the-Sun-I.mp3
Walking-on-the-Sun-I.mp4
Walking-on-the-Sun-II-R.mp3
Walking-on-the-Sun-II-R.mp4
Walking-on-the-Sun-Reggae.mp3
Walking-on-the-Sun-Reggae.mp4
Walking-on-the-Sun-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Magnetic chaos
Blowing in my face
Hitting all of us
In the human race

[Verse 2]
Solar winds
Blowing me down
Greed rescinds
Fall of the crown

[Chorus]
Walking on the sun
While the world comes undone
Walking on the sun
Ain’t that much fun

[Verse 3]
Blinding light
Can’t take flight
No respite in sight
No delight

[Verse 4]
Gravity crush
(Shh, just hush)
Tread lightly on plasma
(Oh, mama)

[Chorus]
Walking on the sun
(While the world comes undone)
Walking on the sun
(The shape of things to come)

[Bridge]
It’s plain to see…
Immediate danger of raw heat and energy
(No, no stranger to human induced tragedy)
A slow motion fate
(At a fast approaching rate)
Question our state?
(Just look out the window to know)

[Chorus]
Walking on the sun
(While the world comes undone)
Walking on the sun
(The shape of things to come)

[Outro]
Walking on the sun
(The shape of things to come)

A SCIENCE NOTE

If you could somehow walk on the Sun, the experience would be so extreme that it defies normal physical intuition—but let’s break it down as a thought experiment, grounded in physics:

First, the Impossible Assumptions:

To walk on the Sun, you’d have to:

  1. Survive extreme temperatures: ~5,500°C (9,932°F) at the surface (photosphere).

  2. Resist crushing gravity: 28× Earth’s gravity.

  3. Withstand intense radiation: including X-rays, gamma rays, and UV.

  4. Have something solid to walk on: The Sun has no solid surface—it’s a plasma ball.

So we’re assuming you’re in an indestructible, gravity-defying suit and there’s something walkable. Now, here’s what it would be like under those imaginary conditions:

The Physical Environment:

1. Walking on Plasma

  • The Sun’s “surface” (photosphere) isn’t solid. It’s a sea of hot hydrogen and helium plasma—a roiling, turbulent fluid-like state of matter.

  • You’d appear to walk on boiling, bubbling gases with convection cells the size of Texas (called granules) rising and falling beneath you.

2. Blinding Light

  • It would be brighter than anything on Earth—~400,000 times more intense than full daylight.

  • Even with filters, visibility would be pure white or blinding gold.

3. Gravity Crush

  • At 28× Earth’s gravity, you’d weigh thousands of pounds unless shielded.

  • Your steps would be heavy, and every movement would feel like lifting a car.

4. Radiation Storm

  • The electromagnetic radiation would be lethal: ultraviolet, X-rays, gamma rays, and particle radiation would cook anything unprotected.

  • Your suit would need to be perfectly reflective and heavily shielded—like a bunker around your body.

Bonus Weirdness:

Solar “Wind”

  • Streams of high-energy particles constantly blast outward.

  • You’d feel no wind (no air), but particles would erode your suit like sandblasting.

Magnetic Chaos

  • Magnetic fields twist and snap like rubber bands on enormous scales, releasing solar flares and coronal mass ejections.

  • Standing near one would be like sitting next to a thermonuclear bomb—on repeat.

Summary:

Walking on the Sun would be like standing on an unimaginably hot, blindingly bright, stormy ocean of plasma under crushing gravity and deadly radiation—utterly alien and chaotic.

Comparing walking on the Sun to the effects of climate change on Earth is like comparing instant vaporization to a slow-boil death—but there’s a meaningful metaphor in it.

Walking on the Sun = Instant Death by Heat, Radiation, and Chaos

  • Temperature: 5,500°C — far beyond the point where matter remains solid.

  • Radiation: Overwhelming levels that destroy cells, DNA, electronics.

  • Gravity and Magnetic Turbulence: Extreme physical forces.

You’d die instantly if not protected by theoretical technology. It’s the ultimate example of a hostile environment due to extreme energy concentration.

Climate Change = Earth Gradually Becoming More Sun-like (in Relative Terms)

Of course, Earth isn’t becoming the Sun—but the same forces that make the Sun deadly are increasing on Earth in diluted but still devastating ways:

1. Rising Temperatures

  • Earth is heating rapidly. Even +2–3°C of average warming means much higher spikes locally (e.g., 50°C+ heatwaves).

  • Some regions may face wet-bulb temperatures (heat + humidity) that humans cannot survive even in the shade.

2. Radiation & Feedback

  • Melting ice reduces Earth’s albedo, increasing solar absorption (like turning Earth more sun-like).

  • Increased water vapor traps heat (greenhouse effect), similar to how the Sun traps and radiates energy.

 3. Energy-Driven Chaos

  • As the Sun’s plasma churns, so too do Earth’s weather systems:

    • Stronger hurricanes

    • Unstable jet streams

    • Flash floods and mega-droughts

    • Fires that create their own weather

The more heat in the system, the more chaos—just like in the Sun’s turbulent layers.

The Metaphor:

Walking on the Sun represents the extreme, immediate danger of raw heat and energy. Climate change is bringing Earth closer to a slow-motion version of that fate: not by fire in an instant, but by cascading heat, unlivable zones, ecosystem collapse, and eventually the breakdown of life-supporting systems.

From the album “To Too Hot

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderTerminal Synergy

Terminal-Synergy-I.mp3 Terminal-Synergy-I.mp4 Terminal-Synergy-II.mp3 Terminal-Synergy-II.mp4 Terminal-Synergy-intro.mp3

[Reprise]
Takes it higher
(Makes it dire)
Our desire
(World on fire)

[Bridge]
Terminal synergy
(Thermal energy)
[Instrumental, Drum Solo, Bass]
[Instrumental, Saxophone Solo, Bass]

[Instrumental, Guitar, Organ, Synth, Bass, Drum Fills]

[Reprise]
Takes us higher
(Times expire)
Our desire
(World on fire)

[Bridge]
Terminal synergy
(Thermal energy)
[Instrumental, Drum Solo, Bass]
[Instrumental, Saxophone Solo, Bass]

[Instrumental, Guitar, Organ, Synth, Bass, Drum Fills]

[Reprise]
Takes it higher
(Makes it dire)
Our desire
(World on fire)
Takes us higher
(Times expire)
Our desire
(World on fire)

[Bridge]
Terminal synergy
(Thermal energy)
[Instrumental, Whistle Solo, Bass]

[Outro]
Thermal energy
(Terminal synergy)

A SCIENCE NOTE
The Earth is a climate system. Global warming is driven by an increase in thermal energy within the Earth’s climate system. This system is made up of interconnected subsystems, including the atmosphere, oceans, and land. Chaos theory highlights the complexity and nonlinearity of these dynamic systems, and this complexity is particularly evident in the intricate interactions between soil, the atmosphere, and the oceans.

Atmospheric circulation together with ocean circulation is how thermal energy is redistributed throughout the world. Chaos theory offers insights into the complex, nonlinear dynamics of climate systems role in the redistribution of thermal energy. The Earth’s climate is a highly complex and dynamic system, influenced by various factors such as ocean currents, atmospheric circulation, and feedback loops.

General Circulation Models for the earth climate are nonlinear and teleconnected. That means a small change in temperature or pressure or humidity in one small area on the globe can cause _large_ changes in conditions _anywhere_ on the globe. This is sometimes called the Butterfly effect. The complexity of these models can lead to chaotic behavior. Climate science must grapple with these models and extract results in spite of the mathematical difficulties, and there have been remarkable successes in some cases and sad failures in others. Nevertheless we must proceed.

Our latest climate model — now incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, non-linear system — projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates, which predicted a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, and signals a dramatic acceleration of warming.

At this level of heating, large regions of the planet will become uninhabitable due to extreme heat, sea level rise, agricultural collapse, and mass migration. Critically, parts of the U.S. are already experiencing wet-bulb temperatures approaching or exceeding 31°C (87.8°F)— a physiological limit beyond which the human body can no longer regulate its internal temperature, even in the shade with ample water.

This is no longer a distant threat. The climate system is entering a phase of compound risk and cascading collapse — and we are already seeing the early signs.Immediate, radical mitigation and adaptation efforts are now essential to preserve habitable zones, food systems, and public health.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSurface

Surface-I.mp3
Surface-I.mp4
Surface-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp3
SSurface-Unplugged-Underground-XIX.mp4
Surface-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Are you sure you can measure
Her surface temperature
If she’s hot but dry, maybe won’t die
If there’s moisture, your wet-bulb might fry

[Refrain]
She runs hot (She runs cold)
Better not (call her old)
Once you understand…
The land on which you stand —

[Bridge]
Her face is your surface
(Be careful when you dig deep)
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Collective souls weep
(Be careful when you dig deep)

[Verse 2]
Are you sure you can measure
Her surface temperature
No longer bold (out in the cold)
She’s taken in, all you’ve given

[Bridge]
Is karma…
Gettin’ even
Mama,
Starin’ the believin’

[Refrain]
She runs hot (She runs cold)
Better not (call her old)
Once you understand…
The land on which you stand —

[Outro]
Her face is your surface
Suffice to say, under the surface
Collective souls weep
(Be careful where you dig deep)

A SCIENCE NOTE

The song “Surface” uses the metaphor of a “hot woman” to personify Mother Earth in a complex, intimate, and deteriorating relationship with humanity during the climate crisis. It’s both sensual and sorrowful—mixing desire with destruction, beauty with backlash, and science with soul.

Metaphor Breakdown: Earth as a “Hot Woman”

  • “Are you sure you can measure / Her surface temperature”: This mirrors the way men often attempt to “define” or control women—and how humans try to quantify and dominate nature through science, while failing to respect her power or complexity.

  • “If she’s hot but dry, maybe won’t die / If there’s moisture, your wet-bulb might fry”: On the surface it plays with flirtation, but it’s a clear reference to deadly heatwaves and the wet-bulb temperature threshold, where humidity and heat combine to make life unsustainable. The metaphor becomes lethal: she’s not just hot—she can kill.

Environmental Themes:

  • “Her face is your surface”: A direct link between Earth’s surface and human survival. She is not separate from man—she is his foundation, his literal ground to stand on.

  • “Be careful where you dig deep”: This works on several levels—psychologically, emotionally, and ecologically. It warns against both exploiting her natural resources and underestimating the consequences of extraction and interference.

  • “Collective souls weep”: A cry of planetary grief—the suffering is shared across humanity and ecosystems, a lament for what’s being lost beneath the surface.

Karma and Consequences:

  • “Is karma / Gettin’ even / Mama / Starin’ the believin’”: Earth is not passive. She remembers, and now she responds. There’s a spiritual and almost mythic reckoning—“Mother Earth” isn’t just a nurturing figure; she’s a force of justice.

  • “Once you understand the land on which you stand”: This line is key. Until humans truly recognize their dependence, their inseparability from the planet, they remain ignorant lovers—taking without giving.

 Summary:

“Surface” is a relationship song between man and a sentient, scorched Earth—a “hot woman” who’s had enough. She’s alluring, deadly, and misunderstood. The metaphor flips: man isn’t seducing her—he’s destroying her, even as he depends on her.

The message is clear:
You may call her hot, but you can’t handle her heat.
And if you don’t start listening—you’ll lose her.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderMatch

Match-0.mp3
Match-0.mp4
Match-I.mp3
Match-I.mp4
Match-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
As donkey is to ass
Monkey is to asp
If you need to ask
… not up to the task

[Chorus]
A match “made in heaven”
(Love matched together)
Well, maybe “made in hell”
(Match starts the fire)
Hearts fan it higher!

[Bridge]
When you scratch (at the surface)
Find a match (for your purpose)

[Verse 2]
Face the mirror,
See the ass (gasp)
The horror…
At last,
I see me

[Chorus]
A match “made in heaven”
(Love matched together)
Well, maybe “made in hell”
(Match starts the fire)
Hearts fan it higher!

[Bridge]
When you scratch (at the surface)
Find a match (for your purpose)

[Chorus]
A match “made in heaven”
(Deaf, dumb, and blind)
Well, maybe “made in hell”
(’cause it’s hard to tell)

[Outro]
When you scratch (at the surface)
Find a match (for your purpose)
Whether you match together
(Or put match to fire)
Take us higher

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderFry an Egg

Fry-an-Egg-0.mp3
Fry-an-Egg-0.mp4
Fry-an-Egg-I.mp3
Fry-an-Egg-I.mp4
Fry-an-Egg-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Is it clear…
Can you hear here
The man said:
(You could fry an egg on my head)

[Bridge]
The atmosphere — (severe!)
Don’t come near

[Verse 2]
In case is isn’t clear…
Steer so you veer
Far from here
Don’t let your feet meet the street
’cause at this rate
(It’s so hot, asphalt has a liquid state)

[Bridge]
Man can’t stand the land
(Why not? It’s too hot)

[Chorus]
Fry an egg on the sidewalk
(Talk, talk, talk)
Take off your flesh
And sit on your bones
(What a mess… carry me home)

[Bridge]
Man can’t see the sea
(Is his destiny)

[Chorus]
Fry an egg on the sidewalk
(Talk, talk, talk)
Take off your flesh
And sit on your bones
(What a mess… carry me home)

[Outro]
Damn it!
(Nowhere left on the planet)

A SCIENCE NOTE

The song “Fry an Egg” is a scathing, surreal portrayal of climate breakdown, using dark humor and physical imagery to express the unlivable heat overtaking the planet. It’s a sonic warning about how absurdly extreme temperatures are becoming—and how humanity’s inaction and “talk, talk, talk” have brought us to the brink.

Literal Interpretation:

This song captures the real-world consequences of extreme heat—from the infamous metaphor of “frying an egg on the sidewalk” to literal conditions now seen globally in cities like Phoenix, Las Vegas, and parts of the Middle East and India. Asphalt softens, surfaces burn skin, and outdoor survival becomes dangerous.

  • “Fry an egg on my head” – A comically exaggerated line that’s now disturbingly plausible, pointing to how body temperatures and ambient heat have reached lethal levels.

  • “The atmosphere — (severe!)” – A blunt acknowledgment of climate extremes fueled by greenhouse gases. The “severe” atmosphere isn’t metaphorical anymore; it’s hostile.

  • “Man can’t stand the land” – Humans, once dominant over their environment, are now being outmatched by their own warming planet.

Figurative Interpretation:

Beneath the absurdity is a harsh critique of denial, paralysis, and failure.

  • “Talk, talk, talk” – This chorus mocks political lip service and empty climate pledges, emphasizing how discourse hasn’t translated into meaningful action.

  • “Take off your flesh and sit on your bones” – A grotesque metaphor for exposure and vulnerability to heat, symbolizing the peeling away of illusions and protections.

  • “Carry me home” – A desperate, possibly fatalistic cry for help or escape when no part of the Earth is safe anymore.

Deeper Themes:

  • “Man can’t see the sea / (Is his destiny)” – A subtle reference to sea-level rise and climate blindness. Humans, especially in leadership, refuse to “see” the consequences that are already flooding in.

  • “Damn it! / (Nowhere left on the planet)” – A final, anguished outburst. The Earth has become inhospitable, perhaps even symbolic of planetary exile—we’ve so altered the climate that there’s nowhere left to run.

Summary:

“Fry an Egg” uses grotesque humor and blunt metaphors to convey the brutal reality of runaway climate heating. It blends absurdity with despair, satirizing society’s indifference and the senselessness of continuing “business as usual” in a world that’s literally melting beneath us.

It’s a dystopian nursery rhyme for adults, echoing with the message:
We joked about frying eggs on sidewalks… and now, we’re the ones cooking.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSteam

Steam-I.mp3
Steam-I.mp4
Steam-II.mp3
Steam-II.mp4
Steam-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
If I’m seeming sad…
(No!) I’m steaming mad
You say sensible heat
(No!) This heat is beat

[Chorus]
I mean the steam
Is a gas
Shattered the dream
Pass to past

[Verse 2]
Vaporization
Causes hesitation
In my thought process

[Verse 3]
Current situation
Clausius-Clapeyron relation
Saturation… more or less

[Chorus]
I mean the steam
Is a gas
Shattered the dream
Pass to past

[Bridge]
Be forewarned (of the storm)
Positive feedback (attack)
Exponentially (inevitability)
Delivers (atmospheric rivers)
Hurricane (going insane)
Heatwaves (nothing saves)

[Chorus]
I mean the steam
Is a gas
Shattered the dream
Pass to past

[Outro]
Be forewarned (of the storm)
Positive feedback (attack)

A SCIENCE NOTE

A burn from steam is generally more severe than a burn from boiling water because of the additional energy stored in steam as latent heat—a concept rooted in thermodynamics and phase changes.

Here’s a breakdown of the physics:

1. Boiling Water: Sensible Heat

  • Boiling water at 100 °C (212 °F) contains sensible heat—the energy required to raise its temperature from room temperature to 100 °C.

  • When this hot water contacts skin, it transfers that thermal energy directly to the tissue, causing a burn.

2. Steam: Latent Heat of Vaporization

  • Steam is water in its gas phase, also at 100 °C, but it contains extra energy beyond just being hot.

  • This extra energy is called the latent heat of vaporization: the energy required to convert liquid water to steam at the same temperature.

    • For water, this is about 2260 kJ/kg, which is over five times the energy required to heat water from 0 °C to 100 °C.

  • When steam contacts your skin, it condenses back into liquid water—and in doing so, it releases all that latent heat into your skin.

3. Why It Hurts More

  • So steam at 100 °C can deliver both:

    • The thermal energy from its temperature (same as boiling water), plus

    • The latent heat from condensing back to water.

  • This double dose of heat energy causes deeper tissue damage in a shorter time.

This concept of latent heat—the same reason steam burns are worse—has direct parallels in climate change, especially regarding extreme weather and the water cycle.

How It Relates to Climate Change:

1. Warmer Atmosphere = More Water Vapor

  • A warmer atmosphere holds exponentially more water vapor (about 7% more per 1°C of warming) due to the Clausius-Clapeyron relation.

  • Water vapor is itself a greenhouse gas, reinforcing warming (positive feedback).

2. More Latent Heat in the System

  • As water evaporates from oceans, lakes, and soil, it stores latent heat—just like steam.

  • When this vapor condenses (in clouds, storms, hurricanes), it releases latent heat, supercharging storms by:

    • Intensifying updrafts in thunderstorms.

    • Powering hurricanes and cyclones.

    • Driving heavier rainfall and flash floods.

3. Steam Burn Analogy

  • Just like condensing steam transfers a massive amount of energy to your skin, condensing atmospheric moisture transfers massive energy to the atmosphere.

  • This leads to more violent weather, akin to the difference between being splashed by boiling water and burned by steam.

Real-World Impacts:

  • Hurricanes: Stronger and wetter due to latent heat release and increased water vapor.

  • Atmospheric Rivers: Carry more moisture, dumping extreme rainfall.

  • Heatwaves + Humidity: Higher latent heat content makes nights hotter and reduces cooling.

Summary:

Latent heat acts like hidden energy in the climate system—just as it makes steam burns worse, it makes storms and extreme weather more powerful in a warming world.

From the album “To Too Hot

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment