Racism-Populism.mp3
Racism-Populism.mp4
/Racism-Populism-Unplugged-Underground-XXII.mp3
/Racism-Populism-Unplugged-Underground-XXII.mp4
Racism-Populism-intro.mp3
[Intro, Spoken Word]
What we’ve got here, the people…
Is racism populism
(Wrapped in nationalism)
Less united. Excite incite to divide.
A schism… far and wide.
[Verse 1]
There once was a land
Of which the whites took command
I swear,
The called the Lenap-e
The Delaware
And, so you see….
[Chorus]
What we’ve got here, the people…
Is racism populism
(Wrapped in nationalism)
Less united. Excite incite to divide.
A schism… far and wide.
[Verse 2]
The indigenous tribes
Butchered… not allowed
To be alive… to survive.
Followed by slavery
Robbery… of human dignity
And, so you see….
[Chorus]
What we’ve got here, the people…
Is racism populism
(Wrapped in nationalism)
Less united. Excite incite to divide.
A schism… far and wide.
[Outro]
What we’ve got here, the people…
Is racism populism
(Wrapped in nationalism)
Less united. Excite incite to divide.
A schism… far and wide.
ABOUT THE SONG
The song “Racism-Populism” is a stark, poetic critique of how the historical foundations of the United States—built on colonial conquest, indigenous genocide, slavery, and systemic oppression—continue to echo in modern political movements that weaponize populism and nationalism. It directly ties these legacies to the current economic and social unraveling described in my recent work on the collapse of the U.S. economy.
Interpretation in Context
Verse 1:
“There once was a land / Of which the whites took command…”
The first verse sets the historical stage by referencing the colonization and renaming of Indigenous lands, specifically those of the Lenape (called “the Delaware” by colonizers). It signals the beginning of a long legacy of racial and cultural domination, where violence and erasure were fundamental to state-building. This resonates with the broader thesis that American economic and political systems were constructed on exploitation, and those foundational injustices are not just historical—they’re embedded in today’s structural inequalities.
Chorus:
“What we’ve got here, the people… / Is racism populism / (Wrapped in nationalism)…”
The chorus encapsulates the core message: modern political dysfunction is fueled by racism and populism, cloaked in nationalist rhetoric. This reflects how populist movements often redirect economic frustration away from real structural causes—such as deregulation, tax policies, or environmental collapse—and toward racial or cultural scapegoats, particularly immigrants, minorities, or political outsiders.
“Less united. Excite incite to divide. A schism… far and wide.”
This line is a direct indictment of how division is intentionally cultivated to distract and destabilize. It parallels the argument that populist and nationalist forces undermine the very cohesion needed for sustainable economic reform and climate adaptation.
Verse 2:
“The indigenous tribes / Butchered… not allowed / To be alive… to survive…”
Verse two digs deeper into the violence of America’s past, highlighting the genocide of Native peoples and the brutal dehumanization of Black Americans through slavery. It emphasizes that the roots of today’s inequality were planted through conquest and exploitation—and that dignity was systematically stripped in service of capital accumulation.
“Robbery… of human dignity”
This line bridges past and present, suggesting that the theft wasn’t just of land or labor, but of identity, voice, and humanity—echoing how current populist rhetoric continues to devalue the marginalized.
Outro:
Repeated chorus reinforces the warning: the cycle of racism and populism, reinforced by nationalism, is not just historical—it is present, widening, and destabilizing the nation.
Connection to Broader Argument:
The song “Racism-Populism” complements the analysis of the U.S. economic collapse by identifying the cultural and psychological mechanisms that maintain harmful policies. It suggests that tax systems, immigration restrictions, protectionism, and nationalist populism are not isolated issues—they are part of a broader, deeply rooted narrative that prioritizes control and division over progress and inclusion.
In short, the song warns that without confronting these historical truths and political manipulations, there can be no sustainable path forward—economically, socially, or environmentally. It calls not just for awareness, but for a reckoning.
Conclusion
Whether we like it or not, basic economics doesn’t bend to ideology. High taxes on productivity, closed borders, trade barriers, and emotionally driven populism all lead to the same outcome: stagnation. The path to a more prosperous, resilient future is clear—but it requires courage, clarity, and a willingness to make difficult choices. We must either open the door to millions of young workers through large-scale immigration or rethink the foundations of our economic system entirely—ideally, both.
At the same time, we face an accelerating climate emergency that threatens to overwhelm not just our economy, but the physical conditions required for human survival. Our latest climate model — now incorporating complex social-ecological feedback loops within a dynamic, nonlinear system—projects that global temperatures could rise by up to 9°C (16.2°F) within this century. This far exceeds earlier projections, which estimated a 4°C rise over the next thousand years, and signals a dramatic acceleration of planetary warming.
At this level of heating, vast regions of the Earth will become uninhabitable due to a combination of extreme temperatures, sea level rise, agricultural collapse, and mass migration. Crucially, parts of the United States are already experiencing wet-bulb temperatures approaching or exceeding 31°C (87.8°F)—a physiological threshold beyond which the human body can no longer regulate internal temperature, even in the shade with unlimited access to water. This makes extended outdoor exposure potentially fatal.
This is no longer a distant or theoretical threat. The climate system is now entering a phase of compound risk and cascading collapse, where disruptions in one area—such as crop failure—can trigger a domino effect across health systems, infrastructure, food security, and civil stability. We are already witnessing the early stages of this unraveling.
Immediate, radical action is now essential—not only to mitigate future emissions but also to adapt our societies, preserve habitable zones, safeguard food systems, and protect public health. The longer we delay, the higher the cost—economically, socially, and in terms of human life.