The second stanza is a bit trickier to analyze. He expands on the idea of conflict by mentioning nuclear warfare, when he claims that “water [rises] up the nukes” (efekannn02, 5). He suggests that as a result of continued ignorance as to the plight being faced as a result of water bottles, the conflict has now devolved straight into nuclear warfare. The original text actually includes the phrase “Rising up” (redacted in the earlier quote for fluency purposes), which may also indicate rebellion from a group of oppressed persons. In the next sentence, he mentions “soup sandwiches [and] bottling plastic” (efekannn02, 6). These are staples of surviving a nuclear fallout, and is a cruelly ironic fate: people are forced to resort to plastic bottles again because there is no other source of clean water in such a post apocalyptic environment. His next line mentions that the survivors of the bombing are “starving for the radios” (efekannn02, 7) a clever tieback to how people are starving in this dystopian environment, yes, but specifically for information in the form of radios. This can be linked to the “flowing talkitation” (communication) mentioned previously, and it used to thrive when blades (grass) still existed, but now that they have died due to the plastic water bottles, people are no longer to receive their news and thus are starving for communication. Finally, the creator ends his rap with “whoopsielies ending the worldlic” (efekannn02,
. By doing this, he brings an element of playfulness to the rap, a sharp contrast to the tales of nuclear fallout he was discussing earlier. This is done to portray just how fickle human nature is, and that the slightest misstep when dealing with plastic water bottles can easily lead to disastrous consequences, such as full blown chemical warfare. As such, notwithstanding the relatively short length of the piece, efekannn has successfully utilized a plethora of rhetoric strategies, literary devices and loaded terms to further his argument that people should join him in his cause of abolishing the tyranny that is the plastic water bottle, once and for all.