bookmark_borderJoules

[Silence]

[Instrumental, Guitar, Piano, Organ, Synth, Bass, Percussion, Drums]

[Intro]
[Instrumental Intro: Pulsing Bass, Organ Swell, Muted Guitar Chops, Rising Synth Filter]
[Minimal Beat, Sub Bass, Spoken Vocal]
The royal fools
(Spoil the joules)
[Instrumental]
[Bass Solo]
[Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]

[Verse 1]
Surprise!
(Temperature rise)
… only the first sign
(Counting out time)

[Bridge – Breakdown]
[Percussion, Sub Bass, Spoken Vocal]
Oh, the tragedy
(Of man’s energy)
[Instrumental]
[Guitar Solo — sharper, angular]
[Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]

[Chorus]
Please
(Avoid the fools)
Think in joules
(Not degrees)

[Instrumental – Extended Jam]
[Guitar Solo]
[Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]

[Verse 2]
Well, here I am
The real danger
(Is no stranger)
It’s the total system

[Bridge – Breakdown]
[Percussion, Sub Bass, Spoken Vocal]
Oh, the tragedy
(Of man’s energy)
[Instrumental]
[Guitar Solo — sharper, angular]
[Organ Stabs, Driving Bass, Snare March]

[Chorus]
Please
(Avoid the fools)
Think in joules
(Not degrees)

[Outro]
Please
Don’t let the royal fools
(Spoil the joules)
Don’t let ’em seize
(… the jewels)
Surprise!
(The nth degree)
The temperatures rise
(Man cries to realize)

ABOUT THE SONG

Chasing the Joules: Understanding Energy in Climate Change

Earth’s climate is a complex, interconnected system — atmosphere, oceans, ice, land, and life all constantly exchanging energy. Global warming isn’t just about higher temperatures; it’s about extra energy trapped in this system.

Sunlight hits Earth, some energy is radiated back to space, but greenhouse gases trap more energy than normal. This trapped energy doesn’t just sit there — it moves, changes form, and powers storms, ocean currents, ice melt, and ecosystem shifts.

Temperature rise is only the first sign. The real danger is the increase in total system energy, expressed in many ways:

  • Kinetic energy → stronger winds, faster storms

  • Gravitational potential energy → higher rainfall, intense convection

  • Latent heat → hurricanes, atmospheric rivers

  • Chemical energy → wildfires, methane release

  • Mechanical energy → glacier flow, coastal erosion

  • Electrical energy → more frequent lightning

Even small shifts in average temperature (like the 1.5°C we crossed in 2025) can destabilize gradients — in temperature, pressure, and moisture — triggering extreme energy events.

To truly understand climate change, think in joules, not degrees. It’s the movement and transformation of energy that drives the extreme events and feedbacks reshaping our world.

From the album “Joules

bookmark_borderThat’s Cold

Thats-Cold-Best-Of.mp3
Thats-Cold-Best-Of.mp4
Thats-Cold.mp3
Thats-Cold.mp4
Thats-Cold-intro.mp3

[Intro]
The way you treat the poles
(Is cold, cold, cold)

[Verse 1]
It’s getting warmer
(Everyday)
Chances slimmer
(In every way)

[Chorus]
The way you treat the poles
(Is cold, cold, cold)
The way you move the goals
(Is getting old, old, old)

[Bridge]
Reversing roles
As our love melts away
(Day after day)

[Verse 2]
It’s getting hotter
(By the minute)
A climate slaughter
(Learn when to quit)

[Chorus]
The way you treat the poles
(Is cold, cold, cold)
The way you move the goals
(Is getting old, old, old)

[Bridge]
Reversing roles
As our love melts away
(Day after day)

[Outro]
The way you treat the ends
(The message it sends)
The way you eat your words
(All the more absurd)
A real bad habit
(Not knowing when to quit)

ABOUT THE SONG AND THE SCIENCE

These lyrics work as a tight, emotionally direct metaphor for human-induced climate change, using temperature, distance, and relationship language to expose both the physics and the psychology behind it.


Warming as an Unavoidable Trend

“It’s getting warmer (Everyday) / Chances slimmer (In every way)”

This frames climate change as directional and cumulative, not episodic. “Everyday” echoes the relentless upward trend in global mean temperature, while “chances slimmer” reflects the shrinking margin to avoid irreversible tipping points. It’s not just warming—it’s loss of options.


The Poles as Moral and Physical Ground Zero

“The way you treat the poles / (Is cold, cold, cold)”

This is one of the sharpest lines. The irony is deliberate:

  • Physically, the poles are warming faster than anywhere else on Earth.

  • Morally and politically, they’re treated with indifference.

The word “cold” flips meaning—from temperature to empathy deficit. Arctic amplification becomes a mirror of human detachment.


Moving the Goalposts = Denial and Delay

“The way you move the goals / (Is getting old, old, old)”

This targets a core tactic of climate denial and delay:

  • When evidence mounts, the standards for action shift.

  • Targets change, timelines slide, definitions soften.

What’s “getting old” isn’t just the excuse—it’s the pattern: defer, deny, redefine, repeat.


Reversing Roles: Nature Responds

“Reversing roles / As our love melts away (Day after day)”

Here, the song pivots from observation to consequence:

  • Humans once shaped nature.

  • Now nature is shaping outcomes.

“Melt” functions on three levels:

  1. Ice melt (glaciers, sea ice, permafrost)

  2. Emotional erosion (loss of care, responsibility)

  3. Systemic breakdown (stable climate → volatile system)

Love melting away mirrors albedo loss—less reflection, more absorption, more heat.


Acceleration and Violence

“It’s getting hotter (By the minute) / A climate slaughter (Learn when to quit)”

“By the minute” signals nonlinearity—the acceleration phase.
“Slaughter” strips away abstraction: ecosystems, species, and lives are being actively destroyed, not passively “affected.”

“Learn when to quit” is both plea and indictment: fossil fuel dependence has crossed from utility into self-harm.


The Ends of the Earth, and the End of Excuses

“The way you treat the ends / (The message it sends)”

“The ends” means:

  • Polar ends of the planet

  • Marginalized communities

  • The future itself

Treatment of the edges reveals the truth of the center.

“The way you eat your words / (All the more absurd)”

Broken promises—net-zero pledges, climate summits, hollow commitments—are exposed as performative. Words are consumed, not honored.


The Core Diagnosis

“A real bad habit / (Not knowing when to quit)”

Climate change isn’t framed as ignorance—it’s addiction.
An entrenched behavioral loop:

  • Extract

  • Burn

  • Rationalize

  • Repeat

The tragedy isn’t that humans don’t understand.
It’s that we understand and continue anyway.


In Sum

This song translates climate science into relational truth:

  • Rising temperatures become emotional distance.

  • Melting ice becomes eroding care.

  • Denial becomes habit.

It’s not just about a planet warming—
it’s about a relationship failing because one side refuses to stop hurting the other.

And the clock is still ticking.


* Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.

We examine how human activities — such as deforestation, fossil fuel combustion, mass consumption, industrial agriculture, and land development — interact with ecological processes like thermal energy redistribution, carbon cycling, hydrological flow, biodiversity loss, and the spread of disease vectors. These interactions do not follow linear cause-and-effect patterns. Instead, they form complex, self-reinforcing feedback loops that can trigger rapid, system-wide transformations — often abruptly and without warning. Grasping these dynamics is crucial for accurately assessing global risks and developing effective strategies for long-term survival.

What Can I Do?
The single most important action you can take to help address the climate crisis is simple: stop burning fossil fuels. There are numerous actions you can take to contribute to saving the planet. Each person bears the responsibility to minimize pollution, discontinue the use of fossil fuels, reduce consumption, and foster a culture of love and care. The Butterfly Effect illustrates that a small change in one area can lead to significant alterations in conditions anywhere on the globe. Hence, the frequently heard statement that a fluttering butterfly in China can cause a hurricane in the Atlantic. Be a butterfly and affect the world.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

The Climate Crisis: Violent Rain | Deadly Humid Heat | Health Collapse | Extreme Weather Events | Insurance Collapse | Forest Collapse | Soil Collapse | Rising Sea Level | Food and Water Collapse | Updates

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Arctic

bookmark_borderStretching the Limit

Stretching-the-Limit-Best-Of.mp3
Stretching-the-Limit-Best-Of.mp4
Stretching-the-Limit.mp3
Stretching-the-Limit.mp3
Stretching-the-Limit-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Stretching the limit
(No, we just won’t quit)

[Verse 1]
How high can we go
(I guess we’ll know)
Puttin’ on a show
(Send in The End)

[Bridge]
Hard to defend
The rapid rate
(Of the irate)

[Chorus]
Stretching the limit
(No, we just won’t quit)
Shrinking doubling times
(Compounding our crimes)

[Verse 2]
How much can we waste
(In all of our haste)
Showing no signs of taste
(Send in The End)

[Bridge]
Hard to defend
The rapid rate
(Of the irate)

[Chorus]
Stretching the limit
(No, we just won’t quit)
Shrinking doubling times
(Compounding our crimes)

[Outro]
Stretching the limit
(No, we just won’t quit)
Pushing the limit
(Our lives in deficit)
Mass consumption
(Degradation)
Shrinking doubling times
(Compound our crimes)

ABOUT THE SONG

The Non-Linear Acceleration of Climate Change: Evidence, Confirmation, and the Emerging Domino Effect

By Sidd Mukherjee and Daniel Brouse
November 22, 2025

In the 1990s, we developed what became known as The Non-Linear Acceleration Hypothesis–the proposition that climate change is not progressing linearly but is accelerating exponentially. Working together, with Sidd’s background as a Doctor of Physics from Ohio State and my own experimental and observational analyses, we produced the foundational evidence for this theory. By the early 2000s, our work had evolved into a recognized climate framework, validated repeatedly through independent replication and supported by an expanding body of empirical data. Over the decades, this body of confirmation has solidified into the scientific consensus we see today.

Shrinking Doubling Times and Escalating Impacts

One of the most compelling indicators of nonlinear acceleration is the dramatic contraction of the doubling time of climate impacts–the interval in which damage effectively doubles due to interacting feedback processes. In the mid-20th century, the doubling time was on the order of 100 years. By the early 2000s, it had fallen to 10 years, and recent analyses show that it has now plunged to approximately 2 years.

This means that the impacts of climate change today are twice as severe as they were two years ago. If the doubling time remains constant, they will be four times worse in two years, eight times worse in four years, and potentially sixty-four times worse within a decade. These estimates are conservative; the doubling period continues to shorten as feedbacks intensify. With no meaningful global mitigation underway, the trajectory is unmistakable and vastly more catastrophic than previously projected.

The Domino Effect: Cascading Tipping Points

Building on nonlinear thermodynamics and chaos theory, we now know that climate tipping points are not isolated events–they interact. As major systems destabilize, they trigger secondary failures, creating a cascade of compounded impacts.

Our recent synthesis of 2024-2025 data shows:

  • CO2 concentrations, fossil fuel emissions, and global temperatures all reached record highs.
  • Natural carbon sinks are beginning to convert into carbon sources.
  • Feedbacks across ice loss, ocean circulation, albedo decline, and atmospheric chemistry are synchronizing.
  • These interactions are driving what we call the Domino Effect–a system-wide cascade that threatens global habitability within this century.

* Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.

What Can I Do?
The single most important action you can take to help address the climate crisis is simple: stop burning fossil fuels. There are numerous actions you can take to contribute to saving the planet. Each person bears the responsibility to minimize pollution, discontinue the use of fossil fuels, reduce consumption, and foster a culture of love and care. The Butterfly Effect illustrates that a small change in one area can lead to significant alterations in conditions anywhere on the globe. Hence, the frequently heard statement that a fluttering butterfly in China can cause a hurricane in the Atlantic. Be a butterfly and affect the world.

The Non-Linear Acceleration of Climate Change: Evidence, Confirmation, and the Emerging Domino Effect — Mukherjee & Brouse (November 2025)

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

 

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

 

From the album “Lulu

bookmark_borderCatch-Up

Catch-Up-Best-Of.mp3
Catch-Up-Best-Of.mp4
Catch-Up.mp3
Catch-Up.mp4
Catch-Up-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Please pass the catch-up

[Verse 1]
Like tater tots
Baking in the sun
All the why-nots
Want us well-done

[Chorus]
Please pass the catch-up
(For our fries)
Skeptics relish
(In our demise)

[Bridge]
The Secretary of Energy
(Caused a scientists’ mutiny)
Now we’ve got to catch-up
(Make up for lost time)
The barbecue of you crime

[Verse 2]
Like tater tots
Baking in the sun
All the why-nots
Want us well-done

[Chorus]
Please pass the catch-up
(For our fries)
Skeptics relish
(In our demise)

[Bridge]
The Secretary of Energy
(Caused a scientists’ mutiny)
Now we’ve got to catch-up
(Make up for lost time)
The barbecue of you crime

[Outro]
Please pass the catch-up
(Before we die)
Skeptics perish
(Scientists try)
Get us out of this pickle
(Caused by the fickle)

A SCIENCE NOTE: Energy Secretary Disbands Controversial Climate Working Group After Scientific Rebuke Energy Secretary Chris Wright has officially disbanded the Department of Energy’s controversial Climate Working Group (CWG), a body that came under fire for producing a climate report riddled with inaccuracies and scientific distortions.

The move, first reported by CNN and later confirmed by NPR, follows months of scrutiny over how the CWG was formed and how its report was produced. On September 3rd, Wright sent a letter to the group’s five members — all hand-picked climate skeptics — thanking them for their service and formally dissolving the group.

The CWG’s report immediately sparked outrage in the scientific community. Dozens of independent climate scientists issued a joint rebuttal, stating the report was filled with errors, selective use of data, and misrepresentations of established climate science. Many characterized the report not as science, but as propaganda designed to cast doubt on the overwhelming consensus that human-driven greenhouse gas emissions are destabilizing the planet’s climate system.

The decision to disband the CWG comes against the backdrop of an ongoing lawsuit filed by the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) and the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS). As NPR previously reported, the lawsuit alleges that Wright and the Department of Energy violated federal law by secretly assembling the group and excluding qualified experts with diverse scientific perspectives. By limiting authorship to five individuals who shared a narrow, skeptical view of climate science, critics argue, the administration attempted to manufacture doubt where there is none.

For many observers, the CWG represented yet another attempt by the Trump administration to sideline mainstream climate science and replace it with industry-aligned skepticism. The episode illustrates the political battles surrounding climate science in the U.S., where overwhelming peer-reviewed evidence of warming, extreme weather intensification, and feedback-driven risks continues to clash with efforts to delay meaningful action on fossil fuel dependence.

By dissolving the CWG, Wright has effectively acknowledged the group’s lack of credibility. But for environmental advocates and scientists, the damage done by such efforts lingers: each attempt to undermine climate science erodes public trust, delays urgently needed climate policy, and deepens the crisis at hand.

* Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model — which incorporates complex socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system — projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable this century. This far exceeds earlier estimates of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, highlighting a dramatic acceleration in global warming. We are now entering a phase of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize through interlinked, self-reinforcing feedback loops.

We examine how human activities — such as deforestation, fossil fuel combustion, mass consumption, industrial agriculture, and land development — interact with ecological processes like thermal energy redistribution, carbon cycling, hydrological flow, biodiversity loss, and the spread of disease vectors. These interactions do not follow linear cause-and-effect patterns. Instead, they form complex, self-reinforcing feedback loops that can trigger rapid, system-wide transformations — often abruptly and without warning. Grasping these dynamics is crucial for accurately assessing global risks and developing effective strategies for long-term survival.

What Can I Do?Solutions to the Fossil Fuel Economy and the Myths Accelerating Climate and Economic Collapse.

 

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is toppled and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

The Climate Crisis: Violent Rain | Deadly Humid Heat | Health Collapse | Extreme Weather Events | Insurance | Trees and Deforestation | Rising Sea Level | Food and Water | Updates

From the album “Undercover`

bookmark_borderBack Together

Back-Together-Best-Of.mp3
Back-Together-Best-Of.mp4
Back-Together.mp3
Back-Together.mp4
Back-Together-intro.mp3

[Intro]
I’m wondering whether…
We can get it back together

[Verse 1]
Right from the start
(Started falling apart)
Piece by piece
(Losing the peace)

[Chorus]
I’m wondering whether…
We can get it back together
Oh, please don’t cry….
(Let’s give ‘er a try)

[Bridge]
At least
(Let’s pick up the peace)

[Verse 2]
Are you watching pieces fall off
(Is it making you scoff)
Piece by piece
(Losing the peace)

[Chorus]
I’m wondering whether…
We can get it back together
Oh, please don’t cry….
(Let’s give ‘er a try)

[Bridge]
At least
(Let’s pick up the peace)

[Chorus]
I’m wondering whether…
We can get it back together
Oh, please don’t cry….
(Let’s give ‘er a try)

[Outro]
At least
(Let’s pick up the peace)
We’re skilled
(Let’s build)
We’ll find a way
(What do you say?

A SCIENCE NOTE

Permafrost: From Slow Thaw to Year-Round Fire

The permafrost offers one of the clearest examples of the widening gap between theory and reality:

  • Old assumption: Permafrost would thaw gradually over thousands of years, steadily releasing CO2 and CH4 into the atmosphere.
  • Observed reality: Vast regions are no longer “permanently” frozen. Instead, they are catching fire and burning year-round, releasing greenhouse gases on far shorter timescales than predicted.

This introduces new scientific uncertainties:

  • Combustion of organic matter accelerates CO2 emissions.
  • If methane is burned in situ, some fraction may be converted into CO2–still harmful, but less potent than CH4 — effectively acting as a limited “natural flare.”
  • Yet much methane escapes unburned, and the net balance between flaring vs. direct release remains poorly constrained.

The key point is clear: the pace of greenhouse gas release is orders of magnitude faster than earlier models assumed. These feedbacks are not hypothetical–they are already active.

Ozone: Intertwined Feedbacks with Hidden Costs

Permafrost fires are only one piece of the puzzle. Another, less understood feedback arises from tropospheric ozone. While CO2 is essential for photosynthesis, fossil fuel combustion does not just add CO2–it also drives chemical reactions that increase ground-level ozone, a powerful phytotoxin. Unlike protective stratospheric ozone, tropospheric ozone damages living tissues, including crops, forests, and grasslands.

Decades of research show that ozone exposure can reduce plant growth by 10-40%, depending on species and exposure levels. In many cases, ozone exposure doesn’t merely stunt growth–it kills plants outright, either through direct poisoning of leaves and roots or by weakening their resilience to drought, heat, pests, and disease. This compounds ecosystem vulnerability, undermining the agricultural and natural systems that sustain humanity.

We are already observing the consequences: much of the world’s vegetation has experienced significant losses in net primary productivity (NPP) due to ozone stress. Multiple peer-reviewed studies confirm that ozone pollution’s effect is far from negligible — particularly in key agricultural regions and forested ecosystems — where NPP reductions have been measured at 20-70%, depending on species sensitivity and exposure levels. Even more concerning, in just the past two years, global forests have shifted from acting as net carbon sinks — absorbing CO2 from the atmosphere — to becoming net sources of emissions. This reversal not only accelerates global warming and destabilizes the climate system, but also undermines food and water security on a planetary scale.

Our own long-term field studies in Pennsylvania illustrate these dynamics with stark clarity. Since 2003, old-growth trees have consistently lost approximately 40% of their foliage over multi-year intervals, ultimately leading to premature death. This decline is evident both in canopy density and vertical structure: the height of the canopy has diminished by roughly 33% over the same period. These localized findings mirror the global pattern — demonstrating how ozone stress, coupled with warming and other feedbacks, is eroding the resilience of even the most established ecosystems.

These feedbacks are deeply interconnected. Fossil fuel combustion increases CO2, which drives warming, while simultaneously producing tropospheric ozone, a potent plant toxin. In fact, all forms of carbon combustion generate ozone precursors — and less efficient forms, such as ethanol and other plant-based fuels, can produce even more ozone per unit of energy released due to incomplete combustion. Ozone-stressed ecosystems lose resilience, making them more vulnerable to drought, pests, and wildfire. Wildfires then feed back by releasing massive amounts of CO2 and generating additional ozone, compounding the stress on vegetation. These intertwined feedbacks are pushing Earth toward a state of compound, cascading instability, where multiple reinforcing processes accelerate climate disruption beyond linear prediction.

But ozone does not only devastate plant life — it also strikes directly at human health. Tropospheric ozone is a leading cause of asthma and other respiratory illnesses worldwide, triggering millions of hospital visits and premature deaths every year. Chronic exposure damages lungs, increases cardiovascular stress, and disproportionately harms children, the elderly, and those with preexisting conditions. The emerging runaway ozone feedback, therefore, is expected to have a devastating dual effect: weakening ecosystems that support life while simultaneously worsening human disease and mortality.

The critical question is no longer whether runaway feedbacks will manifest, but how quickly and at what scale. Mounting evidence shows these processes are unfolding at rates orders of magnitude faster than once assumed, compressing what was believed to be a centuries-long trajectory into mere decades — or even years. Already, ozone pollution, escalating wildfires, and other human-driven disturbances have, for the past two years, transformed the world’s forests from carbon sinks into net sources of CO2. Yet, the precise math and physics governing the interactions among permafrost thaw, wildfire combustion, tropospheric ozone, and ecosystem collapse remain deeply complex and poorly constrained. Because these are nonlinear systems, thresholds can be crossed abruptly, triggering sudden and irreversible shifts rather than gradual change.

This is the true frontier of climate science: not simply tracking emissions, but mapping the cascading, self-reinforcing loops already reshaping the Earth system. Our current research is focused here — on quantifying the pace, scale, and tipping dynamics of these runaway feedbacks — in order to illuminate how close we are to thresholds that could define the future of human civilization.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

The Climate Crisis: Violent Rain | Deadly Humid Heat | Health Collapse | Extreme Weather Events | Insurance | Trees and Deforestation | Rising Sea Level | Food and Water

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Discombobulated

bookmark_borderWhirling Around

Whirling-Around-Best-Of.mp3
Whirling-Around-Best-Of.mp4Whirling-Around.mp3
Whirling-Around.mp4
Whirling-Around-intro.mp3

[Intro]
(What I said)
Keeps whirling around
(In my head)
Round and round (going down)

[Verse 1]
A complex subject
That did perplex
Is now my object
Which I reflect

[Bridge]
(What does it mean?)
Time to come clean

[Chorus]
(What I said)
Keeps whirling around
(In my head)
Round and round (going down)

[Bridge]
(What does it mean?)
Man’s obscene machine

[Verse 2]
Calculus and physics
To the mind is music
Given half a chance
You can watch ’em dance

[Bridge]
(What does it mean?)
Time to come clean

[Chorus]
(What I said)
Keeps whirling around
(In my head)
Round and round (going down)

[Bridge]
(What does it mean?)
Man’s obscene machine

[Chorus]
(What I said)
Keeps whirling around
(In my head)
Round and round (going down)

[Outro]
(What I said)
Keeps whirling around
(In my head)
Round and round
(As it goes down)

A SCIENCE NOTE
Research and Development Incorporating Complex Social-Ecological Feedback Loops Within a Dynamic, Non-Linear System is an extremely complex subject. A small example of this complexity can be seen in the interaction of the Albedo Feedback Loop, Brown Carbon Feedback Loop, Freshwater-AMOC Disruption Loop, Permafrost-Methane Feedback Loop, Amazon Rainforest Dieback Feedback Loop, Sudden Sea Level Rise Pulses (“Cork Release” Events), Hydroclimate Whiplash, and Arctic Sea Ice Feedback.

Lately, my deep reflection has centered on how tipping points have triggered self-sustaining feedback loops within the climate system. We knew this was coming–and now it is here. I was prepared for that part.

What I could not fully envision was how quickly the interplay of these tipping points would ignite a domino effect–so, so fast.

Now, I can see it clearly: the nonlinear, dynamic dance of economic, physical, and ecological systems in real time. This is pure math and science visibly unfolding, transforming abstract models into undeniable, measurable reality.

Humans will accelerate the collapse of one of Earth’s most critical climate regulators, impacting global food systems, weather stability, and habitability.

* Our climate model — 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.

Tipping points and feedback loops drive the acceleration of climate change. When one tipping point is breached and triggers others, the cascading collapse is known as the Domino Effect.

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Upward

bookmark_borderUntangle

Untangle-I.mp3
Untangle-I.mp4
Untangle-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3
Untangle-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4
Untangle-intro.mp3

[Intro]
The human angle
(Ever harder to untangle)

[Bridge]
Must confess
(Quite a mess)

[Verse 1]
Our vectors
Getting all entwined
Lost hectors
Of forest that we mined

[Chorus]
The human angle
(Ever harder to untangle)
Standing on our shoelaces
(Falling on our faces)

[Bridge]
Untangle
(Our angle)
Must confess
(Quite a mess)

[Verse 2]
Our vectors
Getting all entwined
Lost hectors
Of forest that we mined

[Chorus]
Figuring our angle
(Ever harder to untangle)
Shoelaces tied together
(Tripping now to nether)

[Bridge]
Untangle
(Our angle)
Quite a mess
(Hard to digest)

[Chorus]
Figuring our angle
(Ever harder to untangle)
Weather together
(Whether to nether)

[Outro]
Couldn’t untangle
(Our warped angle)
Quite a mess
(Failed the test)

A MATH AND SCIENCE NOTE

A vector diagram of human-induced climate change would show:

  • Each major human activity as a vector (an arrow).

  • Each vector would have:

    • Magnitude = how strong the effect is (how much it drives climate change).

    • Direction = what type of effect it causes (warming, cooling, feedback loops, etc.).

Some of the main vectors would be:

Activity Vector Direction Vector Magnitude
Burning fossil fuels (coal, oil, gas) Strongly toward global warming Very large
Deforestation Toward warming (loss of carbon sinks) Large
Industrial agriculture Toward warming (methane, nitrous oxide) Medium-large
Aerosol pollution (tiny particles) Slightly toward cooling (reflect sunlight) Small-medium
Urbanization (heat islands) Toward local and global warming Medium
Climate feedback loops (like melting ice reducing reflectivity) Toward accelerated warming Growing rapidly

How the diagram would look:

  • A large cluster of vectors mostly pointing in the same general warming direction.

  • A few smaller vectors pointing opposite (cooling, like aerosols) — but not strong enough to cancel out the warming ones.

  • Some vectors bending and amplifying others, showing feedback loops (ex: hotter temperatures = more wildfires = more CO₂ released = even hotter temperatures).

Conceptually:

  • Human-induced climate change would look like an overwhelmingly strong push (vector sum) toward global warming.

  • The overall resultant vector would be:

    • Very long

    • Very sharply pointed toward higher temperatures, more extreme weather, rising seas, ecosystem collapse, etc.

In simple terms:
Imagine a bunch of arrows (vectors) — the biggest and most powerful ones (like fossil fuel burning) all point toward “Warming” with huge force. A few tiny arrows (like aerosol cooling) point the other way, but they’re way too small to stop the giant surge.

From the album “Angle

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderShifting Goalposts

Shifting-Goalposts-I.mp3
Shifting-Goalposts-I.mp4
Shifting-Goalposts-II-R.mp3
Shifting-Goalposts-II-R.mp4
Shifting-Goalposts-Reggae.mp3
Shifting-Goalposts-Reggae.mp4
Shifting-Goalposts-Unplugged-Underground-XVI.mp3
Shifting-Goalposts-Unplugged-Underground-XVI.mp4;
SShifting-Goalposts-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Shifting goalposts
By Earth’s hosts
Past one point five
Can we survive

[Verse 1]
Uninterested interests shift
Their morals set adrift
The target unachievable
Are they believable

[Chorus]
Shifting goalposts
By Earth’s hosts
Past one point five
(Can we survive)

[Bridge]
Will we thrive
(As we dive)
Into the depths of despair
(Are we already there?)

[Verse 2]
Overshoot and return
Won’t we ever learn
Removal technology
Is mythology

[Chorus]
Shifting goalposts
By Earth’s hosts
Past one point five
(Can we survive)

[Bridge]
Will we thrive
(As we dive)
Into the depths of despair
(Are we already there?)

[Chorus]
Shifting goalposts
By Earth’s hosts
Past one point five
(Can we survive)

[Outro]
Can I stay alive
(If we drive)

A SCIENCE NOTE
The 1.5°C target in the Paris Agreement is a moving target due to the way global temperatures are measured and interpreted.

Feedback Loops and the Risk of “Locking In” 1.5°C

  • If emissions stay high, we will permanently lock in warming beyond 1.5°C.

  • The real danger is that if we delay action, crossing 1.5°C even temporarily triggers irreversible climate feedbacks, making it impossible to return to safer levels.

Shifting Goalposts

  • Some political and economic interests may reframe the target as unachievable, shifting focus to “keeping below 2°C” instead.

  • Others may push for “overshoot and return” scenarios, where we exceed 1.5°C but later try to bring temperatures back down with carbon removal technologies.

Bottom Line

  • The Paris 1.5°C target was never a strict “red line” but a long-term guideline.

  • Since 2024 has already passed that threshold in annual temperatures, the debate now shifts to whether this is temporary or permanent.

  • The more we delay cutting emissions, the more 1.5°C becomes truly impossible, moving us toward a 2°C+ world with severe consequences.

 

From the album “Moving Target

Also found on the album “Reggae Foray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderStorm Front

Storm-Front-I.mp3
Storm-Front-I.mp4
Storm-Front-II.mp3
Storm-Front-II.mp4
Storm-Front-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Looks like it might rain
(Bringing on the pain)
From man’s bad habit
(Of destroyed habitat)

[Chorus]
(To be blunt)
Going to try to hide
(’cause you can’t ride)
A storm front

[Bridge]
Amplifying
(With negativity)
Testifying
(To man’s activity)

[Verse 2]
Looks like it’s going to pour
(Bringing on the reign)
Can we take any more
(Earth’s under strain)

[Chorus]
(To be blunt)
Going to try to hide
(’cause you can’t ride)
A storm front

[Bridge]
Amplifying
(With negativity)
Testifying
(To man’s activity)

[Chorus]
(To be blunt)
Going to try to hide
(’cause you can’t ride)
A storm front

A SCIENCE NOTE
A “storm front” or “weather front” is the boundary between two air masses of different temperatures and moisture content, often leading to significant weather changes like precipitation and thunderstorms.

Storm fronts are becoming more frequent and severe due to climate change primarily because of rising global temperatures, which increase atmospheric instability and fuel more extreme weather patterns. Here’s how:

1. Warmer Air Holds More Moisture

  • As temperatures rise, the atmosphere can hold more water vapor (about 7% more for every 1°C increase). This means storms have more moisture available, leading to heavier and more intense rainfall, which increases the risk of flash floods.

2. Increased Heat Leads to Stronger Storm Systems

  • More heat in the atmosphere and oceans provides additional energy to storm systems. This results in:

    • More powerful thunderstorms with stronger updrafts.

    • More intense mid-latitude cyclones and extratropical storms.

    • Greater frequency of tornado outbreaks due to increased wind shear and instability.

3. Jet Stream Disruptions

  • The warming Arctic is weakening the temperature gradient between polar and tropical regions, which affects the jet stream:

    • A slower, wavier jet stream can cause storm systems to stall, leading to prolonged extreme weather (e.g., days of heavy rain, heat waves, or snowstorms).

    • More erratic movements bring severe weather to areas that historically experienced milder conditions.

4. Shifting Storm Tracks

  • Climate change is pushing storm tracks poleward, meaning regions that previously had moderate weather may now experience stronger and more frequent storms.

5. More Extreme Temperature Contrasts

  • As climate change causes some regions to warm faster than others, sharp temperature contrasts become more frequent, intensifying the strength of storm fronts.

6. More Frequent and Intense Extreme Weather Events

  • Studies show that derechos (fast-moving wind storms), bomb cyclones, and atmospheric rivers are becoming more common, causing widespread damage.

  • More intense cold fronts paradoxically occur due to warming-driven disruptions in the polar vortex.

Conclusion

Climate change is amplifying storm activity by increasing the energy available in the atmosphere and disrupting traditional weather patterns. This results in more frequent, intense, and prolonged storms, leading to greater damage from flooding, wind, and extreme temperature swings.

From the album “On the Edge

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSirens

Sirens-0.mp3
Sirens-0.mp4
Sirens-I.mp3
Sirens-I.mp4
Sirens-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Sirens are wailing
(Humans are failing)
Time to wake
(Before we bake)

[Verse 1]
Can’t you hear the alarm
(Trying to prevent harm)
Don’t you see the signs
(Everything’s not fine)

[Chorus]
Sirens are wailing
(Humans are failing)
Time to wake
(Before we bake)

[Bridge]
Please send aid
(We’re starting to fade)
Please send help
(And heed our yelp)

[Verse 2]
Can you hear the alarm bell
(As we turn Earth to hell )
Are you even aware
(Or don’t you even care)

[Chorus]
Sirens are wailing
(Humans are failing)
Time to wake
(Before we bake)

[Bridge]
Please send aid
(We’re starting to fade)
Please send help
(And heed our yelp)

[Chorus]
Sirens are wailing
(Humans are failing)
Time to wake
(Before we bake)

[Outro]
Please send help
(And hear our yelp)

From the album “Red Sky at Morning” by Daniel

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderExceed Escape Velocity

[Intro]
Indeed the need to exceed
… escape velocity
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
(With veracity)

[Verse 1]
Radiates back as heat
(Cycle, repeat)
Re-radiate back, ack, ack
(Temperate under attack)

[Bridge]
Indeed the need to exceed
… escape velocity
(With veracity)

[Chorus]
Those gases carry too much weight
(Bearing down on me)
Going to fire me up at this rate
(Burning down all I see)

[Verse 2]
Effectively “trapping” heat
(Nature can’t compete)
Infrared radiation
(Burning sensation)

[Bridge]
Indeed the need to exceed
… escape velocity
(With veracity)

[Chorus]
Those gases carry too much weight
(Bearing down on me)
Going to fire me up at this rate
(Burning down all I see)

[Outro]
Indeed the need to exceed
(… escape velocity)

A SCIENCE NOTE
Greenhouse gases, such as carbon dioxide (CO2), methane (CH4), and water vapor (H2O), remain trapped in Earth’s atmosphere rather than escaping into space due to several physical principles and atmospheric dynamics:


1. Earth’s Gravity

  • Earth’s gravitational force is strong enough to hold gases close to the planet.
  • The molecules of greenhouse gases are not moving fast enough to overcome Earth’s gravity and escape into space. For gases to escape, their kinetic energy would have to exceed the planet’s escape velocity (about 11.2 km/s for Earth).

2. Atmospheric Pressure and Density

  • The lower layers of the atmosphere are dense, and gases tend to diffuse within these layers, staying trapped closer to the Earth’s surface.
  • Greenhouse gases mix and disperse through the atmosphere but remain confined within it due to pressure gradients.

3. Interaction with Infrared Radiation

  • Greenhouse gases are particularly effective at absorbing and re-emitting infrared radiation (heat) from the Earth’s surface.
  • When solar energy reaches Earth, the surface absorbs it and radiates it back as heat. Greenhouse gas molecules absorb this heat and re-radiate it in all directions, including back toward the surface, effectively “trapping” heat within the atmosphere.

4. Role of Earth’s Atmosphere

  • The troposphere, the lowest layer of the atmosphere where weather occurs, acts as the primary reservoir for greenhouse gases.
  • Above the troposphere is the stratosphere, which contains the ozone layer and prevents certain gases from rising higher due to temperature gradients and chemical stability.

5. Molecular Weight

  • Greenhouse gases, particularly CO2 and CH4, are relatively heavy compared to lighter gases like hydrogen (H2) or helium (He). Lighter gases are more likely to escape Earth’s gravitational pull over time, but heavier greenhouse gases remain trapped within the atmosphere.

6. Earth’s Magnetic Field

  • The magnetic field protects Earth from solar wind, which might otherwise strip away the atmosphere over time. This magnetic shield helps retain greenhouse gases and other atmospheric components.

7. Lack of Sufficient Energy for Escape

  • Greenhouse gases do not possess enough energy to escape Earth’s atmosphere. Their kinetic energy, dictated by Earth’s atmospheric temperatures, is far below the energy required to escape into space.

Together, these factors ensure that greenhouse gases remain in the atmosphere, where they contribute to the greenhouse effect.

From the album “Trapped” by Daniel

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderWorld on Fire

[Intro]
A world on fire
(Growing higher)
A world on fire
(Getting dire)

[Verse 1]
LA woman
Come on, light my fire
They say no man
Goes on to aspire

[Chorus]
A world on fire
(Growing higher)
A world on fire
(Getting dire)

[Bridge]
Fire!
(Sound the alarm)
Fire!
(Impending harm)

[Verse 2]
That city is hot (hot, hot)
But, after all… (why not?)
No doubt a drought…
And, the high winds (blowin’ again)

[Chorus]
A world on fire
(Growing higher)
A world on fire
(Getting dire)

[Bridge]
Fire!
(Sound the alarm)
Fire!
(Impending harm)

[Chorus]
A world on fire
(Growing higher)
A world on fire
(Getting dire)

[Outro]
(Oh, oh) the fires
(Time transpires)

A SCIENCE NOTE
The Los Angeles wildfires are an exceptionally severe example of multiple climate extremes converging to create a catastrophic event. Over the past several decades, the region has experienced a record-breaking drought that has significantly lowered the water table, leaving vegetation dry and highly flammable. This prolonged period of aridity set the stage for the rapid ignition and spread of the fires. Adding to this perilous situation, hurricane-strength winds fanned the flames, transforming a single fire into multiple rapidly spreading infernos. These winds, fueled by high-pressure systems and seasonal weather patterns, carried embers over vast distances, igniting new hotspots and making containment efforts almost impossible. The extreme winds posed an additional challenge: they were so intense that aerial firefighting efforts — a critical component of fire suppression — were rendered ineffective. Planes and helicopters, which typically drop water and fire retardants, could not operate safely, leaving firefighters on the ground to battle the blazes under incredibly dangerous conditions.

This convergence of drought, high winds, and unrelenting fire illustrates the growing intensity and complexity of climate-related disasters. It also highlights the urgent need for stronger disaster preparedness, investment in climate resilience, and policies aimed at mitigating the root causes of climate change.

As of January 2025, the acceleration of climate change impacts appears to be doubling every two years. This trend suggests that the damage caused by climate change today is twice as severe as it was just two years ago. If this trajectory continues, the damage could be four times worse in two years and eight times worse in four years. These projections are conservative, assuming the doubling interval remains stable and does not shrink further — a possibility that cannot be ruled out given the current trajectory.

Alarmingly, this rapid acceleration does not seem to be an anomaly. If it persists, the consequences could far exceed prior expectations, potentially pushing the Earth’s climate system into uncharted and catastrophic territory. Recent updates to climate models, which now integrate complex social-ecological interactions, indicate that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C within this century — a stark departure from earlier predictions of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years.

Such an increase would have devastating impacts, including widespread ecosystem collapse, extreme weather events becoming the norm, uninhabitable regions due to heat and drought, and severe disruptions to food and water supplies. The urgency to act has never been greater, as the window to mitigate these risks continues to close rapidly.

The Los Angeles wildfires serve as yet another warning about the urgent need to address climate change and its far-reaching consequences.

From the album “ComprehEnd… the End” by The End

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderComprehEnd… the End

[Intro]
Woe! (oh, oh…) Man, the Man
Done me wrong
(Understand?)
Man’s damned demand
(Comprehend… The End)

[Bridge]
Claim to be my friend
While stabbing (stabbing, back stabbing)
Bringing on The End
Still grabbing (grabbing and stabbing)

[Verse]
Man manifested (all infested)
Infested brain (far from sane)
Infested soul (know no role)
Man manifested (all infested)

[Chorus]
Woe! (oh, oh…) Man, the Man
Done me wrong
(Understand?)
Man’s damned demand
(Comprehend… The End)

[Bridge]
Claim to be my friend
While stabbing (stabbing, back stabbing)
Bringing on The End
Still grabbing (grabbing and stabbing)

[Chorus]
Woe! (oh, oh…) Man, the Man
Done me wrong
(Understand?)
Man’s damned demand
(Comprehend… The End)

[Outro]
Infested mind (far from kind)
Infested heart (will not start)
Man manifested (man’s infested)

A SCIENCE NOTE
In the 1990s, we first hypothesized the non-linear acceleration of climate change. By the early 2000s, this hypothesis had evolved into established climate theory, now widely recognized as scientific fact. My lab partner, a Doctor of Physics from Ohio State, and I collaborated to provide key evidence supporting this theory. Over the years, we have observed a dramatic reduction in the doubling time of climate change impacts — the rate at which these effects intensify. Initially, the doubling time was approximately 100 years, but it has since decreased to 10 years and, more recently, to just 2 years.

This trend implies that the damage caused by climate change today is double what it was two years ago. In two more years, it could be four times worse, and in four years, eight times worse. These projections are conservative, assuming the doubling period does not continue to shrink further. Alarmingly, this rapid acceleration does not appear to be an anomaly. If this trajectory persists, the consequences will likely be far more catastrophic than previously anticipated.

The evidence is clear: climate change is rapidly accelerating, and the costs — both economic and human — are growing exponentially. The future demands decisive and immediate action to curb greenhouse gas emissions and prevent further environmental and societal collapse. Our updated climate model, now integrating complex social-ecological factors, shows that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C within this century — far beyond previous predictions of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years. This kind of warming could bring us dangerously close to the “wet-bulb” threshold, where heat and humidity exceed the human body’s ability to cool itself, leading to fatal consequences.

From the album “ComprehEnd… the End” by The End

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous

bookmark_borderTook the Red Pill

[Intro]
Done took the red pill
Got the the selfish ill
(Drill, Baby, Drill)

[Verse 1]
In denial
(Will defile)
Just his style
(Illogical)
Took the red pill (ill, ill, ill)
Got the the selfish ill
(Drill, Baby, Drill)

[Chorus]
Turning to the habitat
(That is that)
Facts are facts
(Can’t get your baby back)

[Verse 2]
Ever dire
(Still the denier)
F’d up style
(Illogical)
Took the red pill (ill, ill, ill)
Got the the selfish ill
(Drill, Baby, Drill)

[Bridge]
Damn the torpedoes
(Full speed ahead)
No, no one knows
(The love of dread)

[Chorus]
Turning to the habitat
(That is that)
Facts are facts
(Can’t get your baby back)

[Bridge]
Damn the torpedoes
(Full speed ahead)
No, no one knows
(The love of dread)

[Chorus]
Turning to the habitat
(That is that)
Facts are facts
(Can’t get your baby back)

[Outro]
The love of dread
(Pro-long… then dead)

A SCIENCE NOTE

Drill, Baby, Drill (How Hate and Ignorance Distort Economic Perspectives)

The Persistence of Climate Change Denial: Impact and Consequences

Many people ask, “Why does a scientist engage with climate deniers?”

Thanks for the concern! You’re right that, for my mental health, it might be easier to ignore them. However, as an educator, I see these interactions as an opportunity to reach a wider audience. Engaging with climate skeptics — what some might call ‘climate dummies’ — gives me the chance to correct misinformation in real time and provide fact-based explanations to others who may be quietly observing the conversation.

By addressing these false claims head-on, I can offer a legitimate, scientifically backed source of information to those seeking clarity in a sea of misinformation. This outreach is critical, especially when so many people are exposed to conflicting or inaccurate claims about climate change. My aim is not to argue for the sake of it, but to ensure that there are trusted voices out there providing clear, evidence-based information on the urgent reality of climate change.

In addition, their opposition is immensely educative in our efforts. In reality, their persistent denial of climate change has forced us to rethink and drastically rebuild our climate models. What were once “worst-case” scenarios have now become the “best-case” outcomes we are seeing today.

Our updated climate model, now integrating complex social-ecological factors (chaos theory), shows that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C within this century — far beyond previous predictions of a 4°C rise over the next thousand years. This kind of warming could bring us dangerously close to the “wet-bulb” threshold, where heat and humidity exceed the human body’s ability to cool itself, leading to fatal consequences.

Unfortunately, we rely on these so-called climate “skeptics” to remind us just how urgent and critical the climate crisis is becoming. Ironically, their denial helps highlight the importance of decisive action, as climate change continues to spiral out of control.

The window for meaningful intervention is closing, and the need for action has never been more critical.

What you can do today. How to save the planet.

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Chaos Theory and Climate Change Brouse and Mukherjee (2024)

From the album The Beatless Sense Mongers: “Consider Reason

Also found on the album “Say Reggae” by Narley Marley

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

MegaEpix Enormous