Over fields of molten rocks
The sun is going blind
Mental silence, poison dust
The air is small and dry..
This is the wasteland
The kingdom of rats
This is the deadland
Where sorrow for sorrow will cry!
Ratscoat and crowskin
Shapes without form
Paralyzed faces
Their features are torn
There are no eyes here
There are no ears
Only their brain
Make 'em see, make 'em hear !
Helpin' each other
They going astray
And then an odd inner voice
Start its say
Why, why
Violent science ?
[x4]
Guilty - you create the bomb
You godforsaken fool
Crave for agony
Survival is your doom
Why, why
Violent science ?...
The sun is going blind
Mental silence, poison dust
The air is small and dry..
This is the wasteland
The kingdom of rats
This is the deadland
Where sorrow for sorrow will cry!
Ratscoat and crowskin
Shapes without form
Paralyzed faces
Their features are torn
There are no eyes here
There are no ears
Only their brain
Make 'em see, make 'em hear !
Helpin' each other
They going astray
And then an odd inner voice
Start its say
Why, why
Violent science ?
[x4]
Guilty - you create the bomb
You godforsaken fool
Crave for agony
Survival is your doom
Why, why
Violent science ?...
inviata da giorgio - 6/10/2012 - 09:40
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Lyrics & Music by Thilo Herrmann
Album: The Daily Horror News
Military competition between the world's most powerful capitalist states prompts governments to spend huge sums on the best means to kill the largest number of people – and that requires good science. So Albert Einstein's theories helped pave the way for the atomic bomb that devastated Hiroshima.
The kind of science that is pursued – and the way it's pursued – is therefore constrained by the social relations of capitalism. Scientists devote more of their time to discovering the military applications of scientific discoveries than they do to finding a cure for cancer.
Medical scientists who work for major pharmaceutical companies are concerned not with curing diseases but with producing drugs whose sale will turn a profit. There is more money in finding ways to sell a cocktail of drugs that reduces the symptoms of AIDS than there is in finding a cure. According to the International Red Cross, only 2 percent of an global public and private biomedical research is devoted to the major killer diseases in the developing world – AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis. Global military spending in 1995 topped $864 billion, while spending on the prevention and control of AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria was only $15 billion.
Likewise, though scientists are perfectly aware that emissions of so-called greenhouse gases are causing world temperatures to rise to dangerous levels, the U.S. ruling class regularly blocks efforts to reduce pollution levels.
Why? It would cut into profits.
THE AIDS crisis in Africa highlights capitalism's indifference to the human suffering it causes.
Africa is home to 70 percent of the world's HlV-positive people and accounted for the majority of the 2.6 million AlDS-related deaths that took place in 2000.
The continent receives only about $160 million a year in aid to combat HIV/AIDS, whereas it needs somewhere between $1 and $2.3 billion, according to the World Bank.
To put this fact into perspective, the cost of two B-2 stealth bombers – almost $1 billion apiece –would provide all of Africa with the money it needs to tackle the AIDS crisis.
The crying contradiction in our society is that the scientific know-how to solve many of the world's problems already exists in abundance – as well as the potential resources to solve those problems. But we live in a society where a minority of people exploits the labor of the majority for profit and where the drive for profit takes precedence above all other considerations.
And that prevents us from solving these problems. And more than that, those who run society continually reproduce the same horrific problems on an ever-expanding scale.
Earlier human societies can be excused for not knowing the unintended consequences of their methods of securing a livelihood. But the modern capitalist class has no excuse for the devastation it wreaks in its drive for wealth.
It continues to starve millions, to pollute and to allow curable diseases to spread – even though all of the resources and techniques exist to prevent these disasters..