bookmark_borderPerma-Unfrosted

Perma-Unfrosted-Best-Of.mp3
Perma-Unfrosted-Best-Of.mp4
Perma-Unfrosted.mp3
Perma-Unfrosted.mp4
Perma-Unfrosted-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Old assumption
Makes an ass of you and me
(Assume)
Resume
Observed reality

[Chorus]
Oh my gawd
(Thawed)
More dire
(It’s on fire)

[Bridge]
Once again…
(Blowin’ in the wind)
Fanning flames higher!

[Verse 2]
Fires combust
Change is a must
(Really)
Orders of magnitude faster
A disaster
(Reality)

[Chorus]
Oh my gawd
(Thawed)
More dire
(It’s on fire)

[Bridge]
Once again…
(Blowin’ in the wind)
Fanning flames higher!

[Chorus]
Oh my gawd
(Thawed)
More dire
(It’s on fire)

[Outro]
Once again…
(Blowin’ in the wind)
Where have you been
(Fanning flames higher?)
The world’s on fire
(Do you understand)
The fate of man?

A SCIENCE NOTE — Permafrost: From Slow Thaw to Year-Round Fire
The permafrost is one of the starkest examples of the 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: Large regions are no longer “permanently” frozen. Instead, they are catching fire and burning year-round, releasing greenhouse gases on much shorter timescales.

This raises new scientific uncertainties:

  • Fires combust organic matter directly, accelerating CO2 emissions.
  • If methane is burned in situ during these fires, some fraction may be converted into CO2 (a less potent but still powerful greenhouse gas) — effectively acting as a “natural flare.”
  • Yet, unburned methane still escapes, and the net balance between flaring vs. direct release remains poorly quantified.

What is clear is that the pace of release is orders of magnitude faster than assumed, and the feedbacks are already active, not hypothetical.

Conclusion: Humanity’s Chosen Fate

The question is not whether Earth will warm — it is how fast, how far, and how violently feedbacks will accelerate the process. A 9°C rise this century may or may not occur, but even “consensus” outcomes (~3°C) would be catastrophic.

The decisive factor is human action: whether we allow runaway feedbacks to trigger an irreversible “Hothouse Earth,” or whether we cut emissions, restore ecosystems, and adapt quickly enough to keep habitable zones intact.

We are not just modeling the future — we are choosing it.

* 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.

 

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 “Sting

bookmark_borderRunaway Feedbacks

Runaway-Feedbacks.mp3
Runaway-Feedbacks.mp4
Runaway-Feedbacks-Pt-2.mp3
Runaway-Feedbacks-Pt-2.mp4
Runaway-Feedbacks-intro.mp3

[Verse 1]
Self-perpetuating
Heating cycle
Beyond human control
Trouble navigating
Avalanche is tidal
What will be your role

[Chorus]
Runaway feedback
(Comin’ back to bite you)
Runaway feedback
(Under attack… whatcha gonna do)

[Verse 2]
Gigatons release
Carbon sinks flip
Jet stream chaos
Save us, pleawse
Better kick this trip
Before a total loss

[Chorus]
Runaway feedback
(Comin’ back to bite you)
Runaway feedback
(Under attack… whatcha gonna do)

[Bridge]
Collapse
(Breakdown)
Relapse
(Shakedown)
Our chaos
(Destroys us)

[Chorus]
Runaway feedback
(Comin’ back to bite you)
Runaway feedback
(Under attack… whatcha gonna do)

[Outro]
Collapse
(Breakdown)
Relapse
(Shakedown)
There’s chaos
(Among us)
Runaway
(Run away)

A SCIENCE MOTE: Runaway Climate Feedbacks and Systemic Collapse

The Arctic as a Harbinger

The Arctic is warming far faster than the global average — ~2-3°C already, about 3-4 times faster than the planet as a whole. Projections vary:

  • Low emissions (~1.5-2°C global): Arctic warms 3-5°C by 2100.
  • High emissions (~3-4°C global): Arctic warms 7-10°C by 2100, with even higher local spikes.
  • Worst-case runaway: With reinforcing tipping points (permafrost, albedo collapse, ocean disruption), Arctic warming could exceed 12°C this century.

Consequences include seasonal ice-free summers by mid-century, permafrost fires releasing CO2 and methane, and destabilization of AMOC, accelerating sea-level rise and global weather extremes.


Global Runaway Feedbacks

If multiple tipping points reinforce each other, the climate may enter a self-perpetuating heating cycle beyond human control. The main candidates include:

  1. Ice-Albedo Collapse — Ice loss locks in warming.
  2. Permafrost Thaw + Boreal Fires — Gigatons of CO2/CH4 released.
  3. Amazon & Rainforest Dieback — Carbon sinks flip to carbon sources.
  4. Ocean Circulation Breakdown — Jet stream chaos, monsoon collapse, food shocks.
  5. Marine Ecosystem Collapse — Coral death and plankton loss undermine food security.
  6. Soil & Crop Failure Feedbacks — Drought, famine, and forced migration.

Temperature outcomes:

  • Linear physics: ~3-5°C by 2100.
  • With feedbacks: 6-9°C this century is plausible.
  • Runaway: A “Hothouse Earth” trajectory of 10°C+ over centuries-millennia.

Feedback-Driven Warming Beyond 1.5 °C

As global mean temperature exceeds 1.5 °C and multiple climate tipping points activate, the critical question is not simply how much warmer the planet becomes, but how quickly feedbacks amplify that warming.

Scientific consensus: Current models suggest that carbon-cycle feedbacks — permafrost thaw, weakening ocean and land sinks, methane release from wetlands, and fire-driven emissions — could add ~0.2-1.0 °C of warming by 2100 on top of direct human emissions. This range reflects assumptions that:

  • Warming is held close to ~2 °C by policy.
  • Tipping points unfold slowly and largely independently.
  • Ecosystems and oceans continue absorbing a significant share of emissions.

Under a high-emissions trajectory, with multiple tipping elements engaged, the upper end of this estimate (or beyond) becomes more plausible.

My concern: These consensus estimates are already lagging reality. Observations suggest that at least nine major tipping points are not only triggered but are now reinforcing each other. Instead of unfolding over centuries or millennia, the pace is measured in years or decades. Models have struggled to keep up with this rapid nonlinearity.


Cascading Feedbacks in Real Time

Regardless of the rise in global mean temperature, cascading feedbacks are already reshaping weather extremes.

In just ten days during July 2025, the U.S. experienced:

  • Hundreds of flash floods nationwide, with hundreds of fatalities and billions in damages.
  • At least five “1-in-1,000-year” rainfall events (Texas, New Mexico, North Carolina, Florida, Illinois).
  • Multiple “500-year floods” across Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia, and Iowa as extreme rainfall overwhelmed infrastructure.

These events illustrate how tipping feedbacks manifest in human terms — not only as gradual warming, but as sudden escalations in climate volatility and infrastructure failure.


Permafrost: From Slow Thaw to Year-Round Fire

The permafrost is one of the starkest examples of the 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: Large regions are no longer “permanently” frozen. Instead, they are catching fire and burning year-round, releasing greenhouse gases on much shorter timescales.

This raises new scientific uncertainties:

  • Fires combust organic matter directly, accelerating CO2 emissions.
  • If methane is burned in situ during these fires, some fraction may be converted into CO2 (a less potent but still powerful greenhouse gas) — effectively acting as a “natural flare.”
  • Yet, unburned methane still escapes, and the net balance between flaring vs. direct release remains poorly quantified.

What is clear is that the pace of release is orders of magnitude faster than assumed, and the feedbacks are already active, not hypothetical.

Conclusion: Humanity’s Chosen Fate

The question is not whether Earth will warm — it is how fast, how far, and how violently feedbacks will accelerate the process. A 9°C rise this century may or may not occur, but even “consensus” outcomes (~3°C) would be catastrophic.

The decisive factor is human action: whether we allow runaway feedbacks to trigger an irreversible “Hothouse Earth,” or whether we cut emissions, restore ecosystems, and adapt quickly enough to keep habitable zones intact.

We are not just modeling the future — we are choosing it.

* 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.

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.

From the album “Sting

bookmark_borderFleeced

Fleeced.mp3
Fleeced.mp4
Fleeced-Unplugged-Underground-XXV.mp3
Fleeced-Unplugged-Underground-XXV.mp4
Fleeced-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Baa, baa
(Black sheep)

[Verse 1]
Mark,
How are you doing today?
Say,
Would you like to play?

[Bridge]
Baa, baa
(Black sheep)

[Chorus]
Are you in too deep
(An elaborate game)
Are the gains for keeps
(Or is mark your name)

[Verse 2]
Mark,
Before you’re on your way…
It’s not even dark
One more play?

[Bridge]
Baa, baa
(Black sheep)

[Chorus]
Are you in too deep
(An elaborate game)
Are the gains for keeps
(Or is mark your name)

[Bridge]
Baa, baa (Black sheep)
Have you any fool?
(Yes, sir, yes, sir)
Free is full

[Chorus]
Are you in too deep
(An elaborate game)
Are the gains for keeps
(Or is mark your name)

[Outro]
Baa, baa (black sheep)
Released of you money
(Fleeced of humility)
Baa, baa (Black sheep)
Be careful (with whom you sleep)

ABOUT THE SONG
The Sting refers to the final, critical moment of an elaborate con game where the mark is fleeced of their money.

From the album “Sting

bookmark_borderBad Blood

Bad-Blood.mp3
Bad-Blood.mp4
Bad-Blood-Pt-2.mp3
Bad-Blood-Pt-2.mp4
Bad-Blood-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Have you seen
(… your spleen?)

[Verse 1]
You’re not immune
From pathogens
You’ll find out soon
The damage, and…

[Bridge]
Have you seen
(… your spleen?)

[Chorus]
If there’s bad blood
(You’ve an ill feeling)
Feel like crud (… drug through the mud)
Best start dealing

[Verse 2]
Red blood cells
Not doing well
All damaged
In this damn age

[Bridge]
Have you seen
(… your spleen?)

[Chorus]
If there’s bad blood
(You’ve an ill feeling)
Feel like crud (… drug through the mud)
Best start dealing

[Bridge]
Have you seen
(… your spleen?)

[Chorus]
If there’s bad blood
(You’ve an ill feeling)
Feel like crud (… drug through the mud)
Best start dealing

[Outro]
(Please explain)
Have you seen
Your spleen
(It’s time to come clean)
You’re not immune
(Likely find out soon)

ABOUT THE SONG
The spleen is an organ in the lymphatic system located in the upper left abdomen that acts as a blood filter and plays a key role in the immune system. Its functions include removing old and damaged red blood cells, storing platelets and white blood cells for the immune response, and filtering out bacteria, viruses, and other pathogens from the blood.

From the album “Sting

bookmark_borderMark My Words

Mark-My-Words.mp3
Mark-My-Words.mp4
Mark-My-Words-Reggae.mp3
Mark-My-Words-Reggae.mp4
Mark-My-Words-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Mark
(My words….)

[Verse 1]
His famous last words
Now seem quite absurd
Utterly uttered

[Bridge]
“Mark my words”

[Chorus]
Going down in flames
(Ain’t it a shame)
Going up in smoke
(This ain’t no joke)

[Verse 2]
Alas…
With his last dying gasp
Utterly muttered

[Bridge]
“Mark my words”

[Chorus]
Going down in flames
(Ain’t it a shame)
Going up in smoke
(This ain’t no joke)

[Bridge]
“Mark my words”

[Chorus]
Going down in flames
(Ain’t it a shame)
Going up in smoke
(This ain’t no joke)

[Outro]
Mark my words:
(“Won’t live to fight another day”)
“Life’s for the birds”
(Mark my words)

From the album “Sting

Also found on the album “Reggae Segue

bookmark_borderWah Wah Yeah

Wah-Wah-Yeah-Best-Of.mp3
Wah-Wah-Yeah-Best-Of.mp4
Wah-Wah-Yeah.mp3
Wah-Wah-Yeah.mp4
Wah-Wah-Yeah-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Wah, wah (yeah)

[Verse 1]
So, you say,
(“Hey”!)
Hoping your problem
Will go away?
That’s a solution
(For institution)

[Chorus]
Have you heard it before
Don’t wanna hear no more
(No, no know more)
Gotta confess… (to know less)

[Bridge]
Wah, wah (yeah)
And, dah, dah (daaaaah)
Dum, de, dum, dumb
(Yeah!) wah, wah, wah

[Verse 2]
So, you say,
(“I’m on my way”)
Don’t wanna pay…
Won’t do your dues
That’s no accounting
(For the debt mounting)

[Chorus]
Have you heard it before
Don’t wanna hear no more
(No, no know more)
Gotta confess… (to know less)

[Bridge]
Wah, wah (yeah)
And, dah, dah (daaaaah)
Dum, de, dum, dumb
(Yeah!) wah, wah, wah

[Chorus]
Have you heard it before
Don’t wanna hear no more
(No, no know more)
Gotta confess… (to know less)

[Outro]
Wah, wah (yeah)
And, dah, dah (daaaaah)
Dum, de, dum, dumb
(Yeah!) wah, wah, wah
Sold your sole soul
(Now it took its toll)
Oh, well… live and learn
(You get what you earn)

From the album “Sting

bookmark_borderHectare!

Hectare-Best-Of.mp3
Hectare-Best-Of.mp4
Hectare.mp3
Hectare.mp4
Hectare-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Hectare!
(Not another acre)
Mock not
(The A moc)

[Verse 1]
What the heck
(What did you expect)
In retrospect
(What the heck?!?!)

[Chorus]
Hectare!
(Not another acre)
Mock not
(The A moc)

[Bridge]
Hectare!
(Raising the specter)
Mock not
(The A moc)

[Verse 2]
(Oh, brother…)
As for Mother
(Can’t neglect her)
Talk about lack of respect
(What the heck?!?!)

[Chorus]
Hectare!
(Not another acre)
Mock not
(The A moc)

[Bridge]
Hectare!
(Raising the specter)
Mock not
(The A moc)

[Chorus]
Hectare!
(Not another acre)
Mock not
(The A moc)

[Outro]
Hectare!
(Raising the specter)
Shouldn’t neglect her
(Don’t disrespect her)
Have you forgot?
(Mock not)
After all…
(The A moc)
Is in free-fall

A SCIENCE NOTE
Yes, sadly it really is global warming — every region is being reshaped, though not equally. You’re right to be concerned if you live in northern countries that rely on the stability of the AMOC for temperate weather. The Arctic is now warming about 4 times faster than the global average (some regions within the Arctic warm at rates 10x). Northern Europe is warming roughly twice the global average, while southern Europe, Korea, and Japan are experiencing their hottest year on record.

The impacts are staggering: Europe has already endured more wildfire destruction in 2025 than in any year since records began. A hectare (ha) equals 2.47 acres, and by late August more than 1 million hectares had been scorched — an area larger than the entire country of Cyprus. According to the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS), this marks the highest total since tracking began in 2006. Spain and Portugal have been hit hardest, with the Iberian Peninsula accounting for over two-thirds of the burned area.

These wildfires are not isolated disasters — they are part of a web of tipping points and feedback loops that extend far beyond southern Europe. Brown carbon deposition, loss of albedo from ice and snow melt, degradation of boreal forests, and thawing permafrost — some of which is now burning year-round — all feed into northern climate systems and directly affect the AMOC.

These regional extremes are connected symptoms of a planetary system in breakdown. The AMOC–jet stream feedback loop is destabilizing so quickly that the call to “wait for more data” no longer applies; the evidence is already unfolding before us. And this is only one piece of a much larger picture: at least nine major tipping points are now observable, interacting with one another in a cascading domino effect. Rather than acting independently, they are reinforcing each other and driving acceleration at an exponential pace.

Our climate model, 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.

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 Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Sting

bookmark_borderStung

Stung-Best-Of.mp3
Stung-Best-Of.mp4
Stung.mp3
Stung.mp4
Stung-intro.mp3

[Intro]
We stung the young

[Verse 1]
Obviously
(Plain as day to see)
The gas you pass
(Obnoxiously)

[Bridge]
Your “be” stung me

[Chorus]
Your poison
(Stung)
Your damage
(Done)

[Bridge]
Stung… (who really won)
One and done

[Verse 2]
Ripped your cord
(Oh, lordy, lord)
Lost your sting
(Lost everything)

[Bridge]
Your “be” stung me

[Chorus]
Your poison
(Stung)
Your damage
(Done)

[Bridge]
Stung… (who really won)
One and done

[Chorus]
Your poison
(Stung)
Your damage
(Done)

[Outro]
Your “be” stung me
(Mortally)
Stung… (we’re done)
Sting, stang, stung
(The swan has sung:)
Wronged the young

A SCIENCE NOTE
The song is a metaphor for climate change.

A honeybee dies after losing its stinger because the stinger is barbed and gets lodged in the skin of a thick-skinned target, such as a human or mammal. When the bee pulls away, it rips its own lower abdomen, along with its venom sac, muscles, and parts of its digestive tract, causing internal organ failure and leading to its death within a few hours.

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.

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 Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Sting

bookmark_borderStang

Stang-Best-Of.mp3
Stang-Best-Of.mp4
Stang.mp3
Stang.mp4
Stang-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Dang!
(No more stang?)

[Verse 1]
For goodness sake
Have you gone archaic
What the elders bake
The kids gotta take

[Chorus]
Dang!
(That sure did stang)
The sting stung
(All’s come undone)

[Bridge]
Sting, stang, stung
(You call this fun)
Sting, stang, stung
(Hands are wrung)

[Verse 2]
Here’s the thing
About you sting
It’s left lingering
(Pain drives us insane)

[Chorus]
Dang!
(That sure did stang)
The sting stung
(All’s come undone)

[Bridge]
Sting, stang, stung
(You call this fun)
Sting, stang, stung
(Hands are wrung)

[Chorus]
Dang!
(That sure did stang)
The sting stung
(All’s come undone)

[Outro]
Sting, stang, stung
(Better watch your tongue)
Sting, stang, stung
(Left in our own dung)

ABOUT THE SONG
“Sting,” “stang,” and “stung” are verb forms related to the irregular verb “to sting,” which describes causing pain with a sharp point or a stinging sensation. “Sting” is the base form, “stung” is the correct past tense and past participle for the action (e.g., “The bee stung me,” “My eyes stung”), and “stang” is an archaic or rare past tense form that is largely considered obsolete in modern English.

The song is about how older generations have stung younger generations with their poisonous greenhouse gas venom.

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.

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 Human Induced Climate Change Experiment

From the album “Sting

bookmark_borderSting

Sting-Best-Of.mp3
Sting-Best-Of.mp4
Sting.mp3
Sting.mp4
Sting-intro.mp3

[Intro]
Here’s the thing
(Sting!)

[Verse 1]
Perhaps
It’s a delayed reaction
Time lapse
Then… action!

[Chorus]
Here’s the thing
(Sting!)
Come undone
(Stung)

[Bridge]
Venom
(Is seeping in)
Feel it come
(Watch the end begin)

[Verse 2]
Dang!
(Did you feel the fang)
Ouch!
(Better lie on the couch)

[Chorus]
Here’s the thing
(Sting!)
Come undone
(Stung)

[Bridge]
Venom
(Is seeping in)
Feel it come
(Watch the end begin)

[Chorus]
Here’s the thing
(Sting!)
Come undone
(Stung)

[Outro]
Poison
(Defies reason)
The latest fashion
(Embraced with passion)
Venom
(Flowing in)
Feel it come

From the album “Sting