The city he lives in is his everything. He can't relate to nature. He begins to hate it and the people who fight for it, because he doesn't want to pay the horrific tax just because he drives a tank instead of a regular car. He wants to fly in his private jet because he hates regular airplanes.
In the song "Nature," I imagine that one day a country and its people will turn against him because they demand that he pay properly for his heavy car and his private jet. He hates them for that...
"Punk Youre Money" is the idea of a person who knows the plight of poverty in a rich country well, because that's his everyday life. Suddenly, he is able to observe his precarious life as an uninvolved third party.
Thus, he can describe the everyday struggle for money and survival with his family in a rich city and simply get to the crucial point of lamentation.
He constantly receives the unmistakable message that he and his children must leave the place that is his home. It suddenly becomes completely clear to him that he is being pushed out. He is supposed to disappear from his previous life. In fact, there is nothing left for him and his family that could keep him in his previous home. Rather, it becomes clear that he is unwanted in a city where money means home, because you have to buy and afford a home in your previous hometown. He and his family can no longer afford that. There are many rich people who are buying up your hometown and thus upending everything.
hometown
can't live anymore:
Although it's barely noticeable, everything is changing so that it has become impossible to stay in your hometown. There isn't enough to live on and too much to die on. A person realizes that they can no longer live where they spent their childhood. Life there is simply no longer affordable. Where they lived years ago, architects or lawyers now work, arriving in the morning with their tanks or convertibles and paying any price to rent a garage.
This leads to the simple realization that I have to leave the place. The simple question at the end: "What's going wrong here?" is rhetorical because the power dynamics and the system behind them have long been clear.
Planet
Although the world has become narrow and small today because global communication between people has become a commodity, for many people there is no prospect of their living conditions improving. This simple insight is the content of this song.
cityrocker
The meaning of life is the night. Enjoying it in the big, anonymous city in the same clubs over and over again. Life seems as if people are living on a stage and everything is one big show. It's all about flaunting the current status symbols in such a way that what you have is clearly visible. That, in turn, represents who you are.