bookmark_borderGoal’s Role

Goals-Role-I.mp3 Goals-Role-I.mp4 Goals-Role-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3 Goals-Role-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4 Goals-Role-intro.mp3

[Intro]
About our goal
In doubt… of our role

[Bridge]
Dues due to our “do”
(Time to pay the toll)
What’s our goal?
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Verse 1]
So, you bet your life
On the stock market
First it took off…
(Like a rocket)
Then, came strife
Came back down to earth
(Worth now dirt)

[Bridge]
Dues due to our “do”
(Time to pay the toll)
What’s our goal?
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
About our goal
In doubt… (of our role)
Figure out (the toll)
Is the cost of freedom
(Being dumb?)
If so, let me know
(How come?)

[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Verse 2]
So, you bet your life
On your career
Now in strife
(cause it’s end is near)
The man of your command
Has damned your demand

[Bridge]
Dues due to our “do”
(Time to pay the toll)
What’s our goal?
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

[Chorus]
About our goal
In doubt… (of our role)
Figure out (the toll)
Is the cost of freedom
(Being dumb?)
If so, let me know
(How come?)

[Outro]
Oh, how droll
(Our goal)

ABOUT THE SONG

This song, “Goal’s Role,” reads like a poetic indictment of reckless ambition and misguided leadership, making it an incisive metaphor for the consequences of Trump’s tariff-driven trade war. Here’s a breakdown of how the lyrics can be interpreted in that context:

Verse 1:

“So, you bet your life / On the stock market / First it took off… (Like a rocket) / Then, came strife / Came back down to earth / (Worth now dirt)”

This verse parallels the initial market optimism following Trump’s election and tax cuts—stocks soared, especially with promises of deregulation and America-first trade policies. But once the trade war escalated, especially with China, volatility returned, manufacturing slumped, and farmers saw exports evaporate. The market’s gains became a mirage—“worth now dirt.”

Bridge:

“Dues due to our ‘do’ / (Time to pay the toll) / What’s our goal?”

A sharp commentary on accountability. “Dues due to our ‘do’” calls out the consequences of the administration’s actions. Tariffs, meant as leverage, became self-inflicted costs—hurting U.S. consumers, supply chains, and exports. The rhetorical question “What’s our goal?” exposes the lack of strategic vision behind the policy. Was the aim economic nationalism? Leverage over China? Voter optics? The result: economic toll without a coherent goal.


Chorus:

“About our goal / In doubt… (of our role) / Figure out (the toll) / Is the cost of freedom / (Being dumb?) / If so, let me know / (How come?)”

The chorus is the soul of the critique. It questions whether the price of freedom—or sovereignty, as used in trade rhetoric—requires willful ignorance. The use of “Being dumb?” isn’t just flippant—it’s a scathing jab at anti-expert, impulsive policymaking. There’s an existential tone too: Is this what freedom means now—choosing pride over progress?

Verse 2:

“So, you bet your life / On your career / Now in strife / (cause it’s end is near) / The man of your command / Has damned your demand”

This stanza could reflect the fallout for workers and industries that trusted Trump’s promises—whether farmers, autoworkers, or small business owners. Careers were staked on rhetoric about “bringing jobs back” and “winning.” But when retaliatory tariffs hit, or global firms moved elsewhere, many saw those promises collapse. The “man of your command” (Trump) didn’t deliver—he damned their demand.

Outro:

“Oh, how droll / (Our goal)”

The closing line drips with irony. “Droll” implies bitter amusement at the absurdity of the situation. The goal, once lofty or noble-sounding, has been reduced to a hollow joke.

Overall Interpretation:

“Goal’s Role” critiques the short-sightedness and performative nature of Trump’s economic decisions—especially tariffs and trade wars. It highlights how these policies, wrapped in populist bravado, lacked strategy, inflicted self-harm, and left citizens disillusioned.

It’s a call to reflect on national purpose (What’s our goal?) and the real cost of misusing power under the banner of freedom—be that economic, political, or moral.

From the album “Record

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderWrote It Down

Wrote-It-Down-0.mp3
Wrote-It-Down-0.mp4
Wrote-It-Down-I.mp3
Wrote-It-Down-I.mp4
Wrote-It-Down-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Would you mind
Writing this down
Citing the kind
Then, send it round

[Bridge]
(Pass it)
Round and round and round

[Verse 1]
If you haven’t heard
Spread the word
The revelation (of an invention)
An invention (revolution)

[Chorus]
Would you mind
Writing this down
Citing the kind
Then, send it round

[Bridge]
(Pass it)
Round (and round and round)
Souls shine
(Divine)
And the kind find
(They’re in heaven)
Begin

[Verse 2]
An invitation (to realization)
A revelation (of an intention)
The creation (of solution)
A realization (revolution)

[Chorus]
Would you mind
Writing this down
Citing the kind
Then, send it round

[Bridge]
(Pass it)
Round (and round and round)
Souls shine
(Divine)
And the kind find
(They’re in heaven)
Begin

[Outro]
Would you mind
Writing this down
Citing the kind
Then, send it round

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderProduction

Production-0.mp3
Production-0.mp4
Production-I.mp3
Production-I.mp4
Production-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Record-breaking
(Production)
Breathtaking
(Consumption)

[Verse 1]
Global moral hazard
Leading our disaster
Hazard a guess, yes
It’s us… leading the charge faster

[Chorus]
Record-breaking
(Production)
Breathtaking
(Consumption)

[Verse 2]
Supercharging feedback loops
Primate’s climate
Jumping through hoops
(Ooops… Mother’s irate!)
Look at our state

[Chorus]
Record-breaking
(Production)
Breathtaking
(Consumption)

[Bridge]
Maximum
(Extraction)
The state we’re in
(Bringin’ on extinction)

[Chorus]
Record-breaking
(Production)
Breathtaking
(Consumption)

[Outro]
Maximum
(Extraction)
The state we’re in
(Bringin’ on extinction)

A SCIENCE NOTE

The U.S. setting record-breaking levels of petroleum and fossil fuel production has significantly worsened the climate crisis—both directly and indirectly. Here’s how:

1. Direct Emissions Increases (CO₂ and Methane)

Despite global pledges to cut emissions, the U.S. has become the world’s largest oil and gas producer—with record output in 2023 and 2024:

  • Oil production hit an all-time high in 2023 at over 13 million barrels/day.

  • Natural gas production and exports of liquefied natural gas (LNG) also hit records.

These fossil fuels are either burned domestically or exported and burned elsewhere. Either way, they:

  • Emit billions of tons of CO₂ into the atmosphere.

  • Leak methane, a super-potent greenhouse gas (84x stronger than CO₂ over 20 years), especially during fracking, transport, and venting.

 Result: U.S. emissions are not declining fast enough to meet climate targets, and exported fuels make things worse globally.

2. Locking In Carbon Infrastructure (Carbon Lock-In Effect)

Every new well, pipeline, refinery, and LNG terminal represents a long-term investment in fossil infrastructure:

  • These systems are designed to run for 30–50 years.

  • They create powerful economic and political pressure to keep using fossil fuels even as the climate crisis deepens.

 Result: This undermines the energy transition and makes it harder to meet goals like net-zero by 2050.

3. Undercutting Clean Energy Progress

U.S. fossil fuel expansion lowers global oil/gas prices (at least temporarily), which:

  • Incentivizes consumption instead of efficiency.

  • Makes clean energy alternatives like solar, wind, and EVs look relatively more expensive.

  • Delays global decarbonization, especially in emerging economies.

 Result: U.S. production acts as a climate “drag,” slowing the global shift away from fossil fuels.

4. Supercharging Climate Feedback Loops

By enabling more emissions:

  • More extreme heat → more air conditioning → more electricity → more natural gas burned.

  • More droughts → more wildfires → more carbon released from forests.

  • More Arctic ice melt → less sunlight reflected → faster warming.

Result: U.S. fossil fuel production is not just feeding climate change—it’s accelerating feedback loops that are very hard to stop.

5. Global Moral Hazard

The U.S. claims to lead the world on climate—but its fossil fuel boom sends the opposite message:

  • Other countries (e.g. Canada, Saudi Arabia, Russia) feel justified in expanding production too.

  • The credibility of U.S. climate diplomacy suffers—why should poorer nations transition when the richest keeps drilling?

Result: The U.S. is undermining its own international climate commitments and the Paris Agreement framework.

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSound but Not Heard

Sound-but-Not-Heard-0.mp3
Sound-but-Not-Heard-0.mp4
Sound-but-Not-Heard-I.mp3
Sound-but-Not-Heard-I.mp4
Sound-but-Not-Heard-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Have I found the sound…
(How absurd it can’t be heard?!?!)

[Verse 1]
Eighteen-sixty
(Seems like an eternity)
Two thousand and eight
(Seems a bit late)
Sound (but not heard)

[Bridge]
(Ah, ha) Ah ha
What a fate
(Ah, ha) Ah ha
Play me the tune
“Au Clair de la Lune”

[Chorus]
Have we found the sound
(The word: it can be heard)
Bound to come back round
(And heard by the herd)

[Verse 2]
Oh, oh don’t you know
Oldest surviving audio
A hundred years
To play to cheers
(Sound is found)

[Bridge]
(Ah, ha) Ah ha
Wipe your tears
(Ah, ha) Ah ha
Play me the tune
“Au Clair de la Lune”

[Chorus]
Have we found the sound
(The word: it can be heard)
Bound to come back round
(And heard by the herd)

[Outro]
What a fate
Better late
(Than never ever)

A SCIENCE NOTE

First Known Recording of Sound (Not Playable Until Later)

Year: 1860
Device: Phonautograph
Inventor: Édouard-Léon Scott de Martinville (France)
Recording: A snippet of “Au Clair de la Lune”, a French folk song.

  • This was the first known recording of the human voice and music.

  • BUT — it wasn’t intended to be played back! The phonautograph was designed to visually transcribe sound waves onto paper.

  • Incredibly, in 2008, scientists used computers to digitally decode and play back that 1860 recording.

So technically, this is the oldest surviving audio of music — even though it wasn’t heard until over a century later.

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderThe Lost Chord

The-Lost-Chord-0.mp3
The-Lost-Chord-0.mp4
The-Lost-Chord-I.mp3
The-Lost-Chord-I.mp4
The-Lost-Chord-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Just for the record….
(Have we found the lost chord)

[Bridge, Vocal Harmonies]
Can we finally be
(In harmony)

[Verse 1]
In search of
The sound I love
A divine note
Now so remote

[Chorus]
Just for the record….
(… the lost chord)
Is ever nearer
(Or did you hear)

[Bridge, Vocal Harmonies]
Can we finally be
(In harmony)

[Verse 2]
In search of
The lost chord
Sounds of love
We can afford

[Chorus]
Just for the record….
(… the lost chord)
Is ever nearer
(Or did you hear)

[Bridge, Vocal Harmonies]
Can we finally be
(In harmony)

[Chorus]
Just for the record….
(… the lost chord)
Is ever nearer
(Or did you hear)

[Outro, Vocal Harmonies]
Can we finally be
(In harmony)

ABOUT THE SONG

“The Lost Chord” is a famous Victorian-era song composed by Sir Arthur Sullivan (of Gilbert and Sullivan fame) in 1877, with lyrics by Adelaide Anne Procter, a well-known poet of the time.

Here’s what it’s about:

Theme:
The song is about a musician who, while playing an organ in a moment of deep contemplation, stumbles upon a mysterious, beautiful chord — so profound and transcendent that it seems almost divine. Afterward, no matter how hard they try, they can’t find it again. The “lost chord” becomes a metaphor for a fleeting moment of spiritual clarity or peace that feels impossible to recapture.

Historical Significance:

  • It became immensely popular in the late 19th century, especially at funerals and memorials.

  • One of the first songs ever recorded (in the 1880s), making it historically significant in the recording industry too.

  • Often interpreted as expressing longing for the ineffable, or the divine — something just beyond human reach.

Fun fact:

Thomas Edison’s assistant recorded “The Lost Chord” on an early phonograph, making it a milestone in recording history.

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderMeasurement

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

[Intro]
I meant…
Can we get a measurement

[Bridge]
Of the love we possess
(Give more, take less)
Unharness

[Verse 1]
Looking down from above
Could we count the love
Measure for sure
How much love does endure?

[Chorus]
(Nevertheless) profess
Of the love we possess
(Give more, take less)
Let’s unharness
(Give more, take less)

[Bridge]

What’s your measurement
(Is it heartfelt)
Do I feel what you meant
(Will it make my heart melt)

[Verse 2]
If push came to shove
Could we count the love
Measure accurately
Our love cumulatively

[Chorus]
Therefore and evermore
(Oh) the love we possess
(Give more, take less)
Let the reign of love pour
(Therefore and evermore)

[Bridge]
What’s your measurement
(Is it heartfelt)
Do I feel what you meant
(Will it make my heart melt)

[Outro]
Therefore and evermore
(Oh) the love we possess
(Give more, take less)

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderRecorder

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

[Intro]
One a penny,
Two a penny
Tunes a plenty
Riff and run

[Bridge]
Under the sun
(No I’m not done)

[Verse 1]
In the second grade
Thought I had it made
Just for fun
Hot cross bun

[Chorus]
One a penny,
Two a penny
Tunes a plenty
Riff and run

[Bridge]
Under the sun
(No I’m not done)

[Verse 2]
Done playing the fool
Learned it in school
Made it may choice
To raise my voice

[Chorus]
One a penny,
Two a penny
Tunes a plenty
Riff and run

[Bridge]
Under the sun
(No I’m not done)

[Outro]
Under the sun
(No I’m not done)

From the album “Record

bookmark_borderBroken

Broken-0.mp3
Broken-0.mp4
Broken-I.mp3
Broken-I.mp4
Broken-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Like a broken record
(Record, record)
Playing on repeat
(Beat, beat, beat)

[Verse 1]
The administration
Causing devastation
Taking the environment down
By a dunce-like clown

[Chorus]
Like a broken record
(Record, record)
Playing on repeat
(Beat, beat, beat)

[Bridge]
Time to smash it
(Thrash it, and trash it)
Shout:
(“Before time runs out!”)

[Verse 2]
The president
Left Earth’s residence
He’s out of his mind
Lost sense of being kind

[Chorus]
Like a broken record
(Record, record)
Playing on repeat
(Beat, beat, beat)

[Bridge]
Time to smash it
(Thrash it, and trash it)
Shout:
(“Before time runs out!”)

[Chorus]
Like a broken record
(Record, record)
Playing on repeat
(Beat, beat, beat)

Shout:
(“Before time runs out!”)

[Outro]
A broken record
(Record, record)
In discord

A SCIENCE NOTE

Environmental Policies: Accelerating Climate Collapse and Global Isolation

Withdrawal from the Paris Agreement:

Trump’s decision to pull out of the Paris Climate Accord isolated the U.S. from nearly every other country on Earth in global climate efforts.

  • Impact: Delayed climate action during a critical decade and gave cover for other lagging countries to stall progress.

  • Result: Damaged U.S. credibility on environmental leadership and led to China and the EU stepping in to fill the void.

Rollback of Domestic Environmental Protections:

By gutting EPA regulations, weakening the Clean Power Plan, and promoting fossil fuels over renewables, Trump accelerated environmental degradation at home.

  • Impact: Increased pollution and carbon emissions, undermining long-term sustainability and economic health.

  • Result: Made the U.S. economy more vulnerable to climate risks—wildfires, storms, floods—while ignoring clean energy opportunities that other nations are rapidly seizing.

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderHistorical — Stop the Genocide

Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-0.mp3
Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-0.mp4
Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-I.mp3
Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-I.mp4 Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp3 Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-Unplugged-Underground-XVIII.mp4 Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-Unplugged.mp3
Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-Unplugged.mp4
Historical–Stop-the-Genocide-intro.mp3

[Intro]
According to the historical record…
We’ve a lot in common
At least a thread
Among common dead
Turn the tide
(Stop the Genocide)

[Verse 1]
Jesus! Can you believe
We both conceive
He was one of us (Jesus!)
Turn the tide
(Stop the Genocide)

[Chorus]
We’re a lot alike
The chord we strike
Love, we’re all about
Let there be no doubt
(All about love)
Love (love love)

[Bridge]
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]
Coming back
(Restoring what we lack)
Justice
(For all of us)

[Verse 2]
(Jesus!) Can you save us all
We’re all caught in our fall
(Jesus!) Please save all of us
From our own ruckus and fuss
Turn the tide
(Stop the Genocide)

[Chorus]
We’re a lot alike
The chord we strike
Love, we’re all about
Let there be no doubt
(All about love)
Love (love love)

[Bridge]
Coming back
(Restoring what we lack)
Justice
(For all of us)

[Chorus]
We’re a lot alike
The chord we strike
Love, we’re all about
Let there be no doubt

[Outro]
Turn the tide
(Stop the Genocide)
(Find out about love)
Love (love love)

ABOUT THE SONG: HAPPY EASTER!
Muslims, Christians, and Jews all trace their spiritual roots back to Abraham, making him a central figure that unites the three major monotheistic religions. Abraham is considered the founding patriarch in Judaism, the “father of faith” in Christianity, and a revered prophet in Islam. In Judaism, Abraham is the first to enter into a covenant with God, becoming the ancestor of the Jewish people through his son Isaac and grandson Jacob (later called Israel). Christians also see Abraham as a model of faith, often referencing him in the New Testament as a spiritual forefather who believed and trusted in God. In Islam, Abraham (known as Ibrahim) is honored as a prophet and a pure monotheist who submitted fully to the will of God. He is also seen as the ancestor of the Arab people through his son Ishmael, and by extension, the ancestor of the Prophet Muhammad. The story of Abraham’s willingness to sacrifice his son as an act of faith is a key narrative shared by all three religions, though the identity of the son differs: Jews and Christians believe it was Isaac, while Muslims believe it was Ishmael.

Jesus is another significant figure who ties these faiths together, though understood in different ways. Christians believe Jesus is the Son of God, the Savior, and the fulfillment of the prophecies in the Hebrew Bible. He is central to Christian belief as the Messiah who brings salvation through his life, death, and resurrection. In contrast, Judaism recognizes Jesus as a historical Jewish figure but does not accept him as the Messiah or divine. Both Christians and Muslims affirm that Jesus was born of the Virgin Mary (Maryam), through a miraculous birth, and that he performed many miracles such as healing the sick and raising the dead—with the power granted by God. Additionally, both Christians and Muslims believe that Jesus will return at the end of time. Christians believe he will come to judge the living and the dead, while Muslims believe he will return to restore justice and defeat the false messiah (al-Dajjal).

In essence, Abraham and Jesus serve as powerful common threads linking Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. While each religion interprets their roles differently, all three honor Abraham as a founding figure of faith and recognize Jesus as an important presence in the broader story of God’s relationship with humanity. These shared figures highlight the deep connections and common roots of the three Abrahamic faiths.

From the album “Record

bookmark_borderAttempt

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderNeed-All in the Groove

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

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

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

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

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

Sing! We need all….
(Need all)

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

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

[Instrumental, Synth Solo, Bass]

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

Now that you’ve….

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

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

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

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

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderRecording

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

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

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

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

[Bridge]
With meeeeeee….

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

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

(Can you set ‘er free)

With meeeeeee….
[Instrumental, Guitar Solo]

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

(Set ‘er free)

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

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderBreaking

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

[Intro]
Record breaking
Breaking records

[Bridge]
No mistaking
(Record breaking)

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

[Bridge]
No mistaking
(Record breaking)

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

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

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

[Bridge]
No mistaking
(Record breaking)

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

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

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

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


🌊 Atmospheric Rivers That Broke Atmospheric Saturation Limits

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

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


🧊 Glacier Collapse & Ice Shelf Disintegration

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

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


🌡️ Record Temperatures Exceeding Biophysical Limits

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

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


🌪️ Tornado Wind Speed Limits Exceeded

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

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


🌾 Crop System Collapse from Heat Stress

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

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


🌊 Thermohaline Circulation Weakening

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

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


🌀 Typhoons That Shatter Ocean Heat Barrier Limits

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

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


🏚️ Infrastructure Physically Breaking From Thermal Expansion

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

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

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

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

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


🌪️ Record-Intensity Tornadoes and Wind Bursts

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

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


🌊 Dam Breaches and Levee Failures

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

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


🪵 Tree Snapping from Heat Domes and Wind Events

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


🏔️ Rockfalls and Landslides from Permafrost Thaw

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

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


🔥 Exploding Infrastructure Due to Heat

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

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

From the album “Record

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderSwing

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

ABOUT THE SONG

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

 Verse 1

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

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

Chorus

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

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

Bridge

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

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

Repetition of Verse 1 & Chorus

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

Bridge 2

Volatility (instability)
Quite apt (to collapse)

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

Outro

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

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

Overall Interpretation

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

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

From the album “Record

Also found on the album “Reggae Spray

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

bookmark_borderDown Day

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

ABOUT THE SONG

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

Verse 1

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

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

Bridge

Systemic cracking
Under the weight
(Of your trait)

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

Chorus

Another record down day
(Like a skipping record)

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

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

Bridge 2

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

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

Verse 2

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

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

Final Chorus & Outro

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

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

Overall Interpretation:

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

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

From the album “Record

Trumpenomics: The Decline of the US

The Human Induced Climate Change Experiment