- Breakdown-0.mp3
- Breakdown-0.mp4
- Breakdown-I.mp3
- Breakdown-I.mp4
- Breakdown-II.mp3
- Breakdown-II.mp4
- Breakdown-Unplugged-Underground-XIII.mp3
- Breakdown-Unplugged-Underground-XIII.mp4
- Breakdown-intro.mp3
[Intro]
Breakdown (down, ditty, down)
You breakdown (down, down, down)
Look around
Breakdown
[Bridge]
Despair and Division
(Due to indecision)
Rising inequality
(From sea to see)
Resource scarcity
(Oh, woe is me)
[Verse 1]
We’ve entered the Age:
“Loss of Cultural Heritage”
(From sea to shining sea)
A K A — We used to see
[Chorus]
You breakdown (down, down, down)
Look around
Breakdown
[Verse 2]
Ancient landmarks lost
(A fraction of the cost)
Entire communities
(Lost into the seas)
[Chorus]
Breakdown (Break down, down)
You breakdown (down, down, down)
Look around
Breakdown
[Bridge]
Despair and Division
(Due to indecision)
Rising inequality
(From sea to see)
Resource scarcity
(Oh, woe is me)
[Outro]
Breakdown (Break down, down)
You breakdown (down, down, down)
Look around
Breakdown
A SCIENCE NOTE
If humans continue to accelerate climate change unchecked, the “end of times” could manifest as a series of interconnected crises that severely impact the planet’s ecosystems, human societies, and global stability. Here’s a potential scenario:
6. Social and Cultural Breakdown
- Loss of Cultural Heritage: Coastal cities, ancient landmarks, and entire communities could be lost to rising seas and natural disasters.
- Despair and Division: Rising inequality and resource scarcity could create deep societal divides, with many losing hope for the future.
The Final Picture
A planet with pockets of habitable zones amid vast wastelands of extreme weather, uninhabitable regions, and collapsing ecosystems. Humanity would face challenges to its very survival, struggling to maintain civilization in a world that has become increasingly hostile due to its own actions.
This dire scenario underscores the urgency of taking bold action to mitigate climate change now. Every fraction of a degree of warming we prevent can save lives, preserve ecosystems, and ensure a more stable future.
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.