Cold Hard Facts
Nordic Thunder Lyrics


Jump to: Overall Meaning ↴  Line by Line Meaning ↴

It's just like you to distort
Everything you hear
Why can't you face the facts
That are so obvious year to year
Take a look out on the streets
Maybe open up your eyes
Or does this make you scared
Because you know your head is so full of lies
Chorus:

It's cold hard facts that we battle the enemy
No lies, no guilt, no fear
It's cold hard facts to your so-called authority
I hope to make this clear
It's cold hard facts that will fuel the fire
And guide us through the night
It's cold hard facts that this gun if for hire
We've dared to face this fight
Can you awaken
From this trance inflicted on your mind
As you're brainwashed by the jews
These parasites will suck you dry
Outright lies, corruption, and power hungry greed
These are just a few of the facts




That I have come to see
Chorus

Overall Meaning

Nordic Thunder's "Cold Hard Facts" is a song that speaks to the importance of facing the truth, no matter how uncomfortable it may be. The lyrics begin by calling out those who distort reality to fit their own narrative, asking them to open their eyes to the obvious facts that are all around them. The chorus highlights the power of truth, stating that it is what fuels the fight against our enemies and guides us through the darkness. Further into the song, the lyrics take a darker turn, warning against the dangers of brainwashing and corruption. Specifically, the song references the "jews" as parasites who will "suck you dry" and warns against falling victim to their lies and power-hungry greed.


Overall, the song is a call to action - it urges listeners to awaken from the trance of misinformation that they may be under and face the cold hard facts of reality head-on. While some of the lyrics may be concerning given their anti-semitic undertones, the song's core message of seeking truth and facing adversity is one that is universally relevant.


Line by Line Meaning

It's just like you to distort
You have a habit of misrepresenting things


Everything you hear
You do it with everything you listen to


Why can't you face the facts
Why can't you accept reality


That are so obvious year to year
These are things that are apparent over time


Take a look out on the streets
Look at what's happening in the world around you


Maybe open up your eyes
Perhaps you need to be more attentive


Or does this make you scared
Are you frightened by what you might see


Because you know your head is so full of lies
Because you're aware that you're dishonest


Chorus:
Refrain


It's cold hard facts that we battle the enemy
We fight against the adversary with the truth


No lies, no guilt, no fear
We do it with honesty, without remorse, and without fear


It's cold hard facts to your so-called authority
We challenge your supposed competence with the truth


I hope to make this clear
I intend to be very plain and simple in my explanation


It's cold hard facts that will fuel the fire
The truth will be the fuel that ignites the flames


And guide us through the night
And it will be with us in our darkest moments


It's cold hard facts that this gun is for hire
The truth is what arms us for this conflict


We've dared to face this fight
We've been brave enough to confront this battle


Can you awaken
Can you become lucid


From this trance inflicted on your mind
From this hypnosis that's been imposed on your consciousness


As you're brainwashed by the jews
As you're being manipulated by Jewish people


These parasites will suck you dry
These leeches will drain you of everything you have


Outright lies, corruption, and power hungry greed
Complete falsehoods, dishonesty, and excessive desire for authority


These are just a few of the facts
These are simply some of the things that we know to be true


That I have come to see
That are clear to me


Chorus
Refrain




Contributed by Jack H. Suggest a correction in the comments below.
To comment on or correct specific content, highlight it

Genre not found
Artist not found
Album not found
Song not found
Comments from YouTube:

Evan Penny

Liked your presentation a lot, but the problem I am having with this whole subject is that each commentator has a completely different take on Earth's temperature history, to say nothing of the possible implications for the Earth and humans etc. Especially liked the recent report from the Greenland ice core station that tells a diametrically different story to that of the hockey sticklers, et al. Data versus statistical jiggery pokery.

One of the most perplexing factors is that when I raise any contrary matter of say the Roman warm period they always parrot the narrative that this was a regional anomaly, or some such counter factual dialogue. Put aside that this type of response is what in physics we used to call a hand waiving argument, warm air cannot in general be temporarily corralled. The region in question is either generally warmer than nearby regions, or it is not. And put aside the lack of a possible mechanism for the formation and maintenance of such a regional anomaly, and put aside the vast body of evidence that the supposed anomaly was NOT in fact regional, it passes my understanding how a hundreds of years long "anomaly" does not spread its warmth abroad.

Anyway, sooner of later this madness will rub shoulders with the Earth's reality, no matter how much anyone argues the toss, or massages the temperature data. Theory ten, practice nil? We'll see.

Matthew James Montgomery

We are not yet at an optimal co2 level. We should definately worry about preservation of forests and diversity, plant life but rising co2 is not a concern.

Jaime Saldarriaga Sanín

Air Temperature is a measure of Heat Flow transfered through Air, which is Energy, not matter of any kind.

Jaime Saldarriaga Sanín

If the Global Air Temperature rises 1.5C during current last 2 centuries it would look consistent with the past.

Hosni Mubarak

Wow!

So What

its not about climate its power and control

Jack Dale

Professional geoscience institutions dispute the views espoused by Wrightstone.

Jack Dale

The Geological Society of America (GSA) concurs with the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicines1,2, the National Research Council3, the U.S. Global Change Research Program4,5, and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change6 that global climate has warmed recently in response to increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases, especially carbon dioxide (CO2), and that human activities (mainly greenhouse-gas emissions) are the dominant cause of rapid warming since the middle 1900s, while other natural factors contribute, at most, only marginally.

The concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere is now higher than it has been for at least three million years4. Global warming by ~1 °C since 19002,5 is consistent with decreasing northern hemisphere snow and ice, ongoing rise in global sea level, and numerous records from ice cores, tree rings, lake sediments, boreholes, cave deposits, and corals5,6. Diverse measurements and proxies, including land- and satellite-based measurements, indicate rapid warming, such that global mean temperatures today are at their highest in 1700 years, while the rate of sea-level rise is the fastest in 2,700 years4-6.

Tangible effects of recent climate change are already occurring4,5, and a continuing upward trend in greenhouse-gas concentrations will result in increasingly significant impacts on humans and other species by the end of the twenty-first century. Addressing the challenges posed by climate change will require a combination of adaptation to the changes that are likely to occur and mitigation of future impacts through global reductions of CO2 and other greenhouse gas emissions from anthropogenic sources.

If no effort is made to stabilize emissions, CO2 concentrations will reach three to four times pre-industrial levels by 2100, and Earth will warm by 2.6 °C to 4.8 °C compared to 1986–2005 temperatures4-6. These changes will substantially alter the functioning of the planet and lead to (1) continued shrinking of Arctic sea ice, with effects on native cultures and ice-dependent biota; (2) decreased summer water supplies in mountainous areas; (3) increased evaporation from soils and stress on crops; (4) extreme precipitation and high-temperature events; (5) longer and more intense fire seasons; (6) severe insect outbreaks in vulnerable forests; (7) acidification of the global ocean for tens of thousands of years, with accompanying likely extinctions; (8) compromised economic and national security because of accelerating decay of infrastructure and increased human conflict and displacement; and (9) fundamental changes in the composition, functioning, and biodiversity across ecosystems. Sea levels will rise significantly, affecting densely populated coastal regions, inundating farmlands, and dislocating large populations; 15%–40% of the anthropogenic CO2 “pulse” may stay in the atmosphere for more than a thousand years, extending the duration of global warming and its effects on humans and other species4-6.
https://www.geosociety.org/gsa/positions/position10.aspx

Jack Dale

The Society of Exploration Geophysicists (SEG) is the premier global professional society representing the science of applied geophysics and, therefore, has an important role to play in the exploration, site characterization, and time-lapse monitoring of the Earth in order to better understand and mitigate climate change.

The Earth is continuously undergoing climate change, but the current rate of increase of both temperature (Diffenbaugh and Field, 2016) and atmospheric CO2 levels (Zeebe et al., 2016) may be unprecedented in the past 66 million years, per currently available data. Since the mid-1800s, it has been understood that small changes in atmospheric gases, including CO2, can alter the Earth’s climate. (For a good historical summary, see Ortiz and Jackson, 2020; for two of the seminal papers, see Foote, 1856, and Arrhenius, 1896). Currently, we rely on global climate models, modern data collection, and research advances to predict future changes and to understand the details of the rapid changes that have been observed over the past 150 years. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has concluded that anthropogenic greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are extremely likely to be the dominant cause of observed climate warming since 1950 (IPCC, 2014). The IPCC goes on to conclude that impacts on natural and human systems will be significant and include risks to "health, livelihoods, food security, water supply, human security, and economic growth" (IPCC, 2018).

SEG joins nearly 200 other scientific societies worldwide and the U.S. National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine in agreement with the IPCC that significant action should be taken as soon as possible to begin reducing GHG emissions. SEG supports our stakeholders in academia, government, and industry who seek to achieve net zero CO2 emissions through efforts such as the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative, and the Towards Sustainable Mining initiative. Further, among the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals are affordable and clean energy for all (SDG 7) and the need for climate action (SDG 13). These two goals are deeply intertwined, and solutions will require the contributions of applied geophysicists.
https://seg.org/About-SEG/Climate-Change

KW F

@Jack Dale Re-spewing the climate cult narrative doesn't make it true.
The emerging data is proving that sea corral and polar bears are not dying, hurricanes and wild fire are not increasing, habitat along the coasts are not in any imminent danger of submerging. The truth is that many animal species are increasing, the earth is greening (more food supply) and the climate changes very slowly, as it always has.

8 More Replies...

More Versions