Barely three weeks into Donald Trump’s presidency, many liberals across the globe seem incapable of having conversations that don’t border on the absurd. Every time President Trump utters a sentence or makes a move, folks on the Left are all over Twitter, proclaiming the sky is falling.

One of their favorite modes of expression is through music, with many genuinely believing their sounds resonate today on the level of, say, a Woodstock. Yet many big-name musicians are too busy expressing their disruptive and in some cases violent thoughts against the new U.S. president (“I’ve thought of blowing up the White House”) that they’re not making as much music as they think they are.

So this means that projects like “Our First 100 Days” are shining examples of whatever “movement” liberals are partaking in against the president.

“Our First 100 Days: One Hundred Songs That Inspire Progress and Benefit a Cause for Change” began on Inauguration Day, Jan. 20. This project delivers a new song to consumers each day, with a “pass” to access all 100 songs costing $30. The money people pay apparently is being donated to “many important organizations who will be the first line of defense against the policies of the new administration,” according to Secretly Group executive Phil Waldorf.

Secretly Group is an indie record label conglomerate that also organized and presented 30 songs leading up to the presidential election on Nov. 8, 2016.

Said Waldorf of the new songs, “We hope that people not only love the music and discover some new things with this collection, but they see it as an easy way to make a contribution to a cross-section of organizations that need the support right now.”

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Apparently every liberal organization dedicated to social justice causes just didn’t get enough funding during the Obama years — so such unifying messages as Tim Heidecker’s “Trump Talkin’ Nukes” are on tap to make sure these groups are adequately funded.

Among the lyrics in Heidecker’s song are these: “In fact it’s a miracle that it hasn’t happened yet.” This is apparently a reference to Trump’s supposed launch of nuclear weapons. That song premiered on Day 2.

On Day 3, Jessica Lea Mayfield’s song, “The World Won’t Stop,” appeared. Its lyrics include the line: “I know it feels like you’ve been tortured.”

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Leave it to the Left to resort to fear-mongering as quickly as possible when a Republican occupies the highest office in the land.

Also included in this collection so far are Adam Torres’ “Dreamers in America,” Peter Silberman’s “Feeling Yourself Disintegrate,” and “Requiem for 2016,” from Tilman Robinson and Luke Howard.

Related: Reba McEntire: Fans Don’t Pay Their ‘Hard-Earned Money’ to Hear Politics

Secretly Group is definitely making it no secret of how out of touch they are with the American people — who resoundingly reject these scare tactics.

Other efforts from liberal musicians and other artists aren’t likely to stop any time soon — and these efforts and “movements” are also unlikely to stop President Trump from delivering on the campaign promises he made to the American people over the past 1.5 years.

But this new effort further exposes the celebrity obsession with Trump, his administration — and his family. A brief rallying cry from the Left was, “When they go low, we go high” — patterned after a remark made by Michelle Obama. But this liberal obsession and the tactics this group of people are employing on a regular basis have gone so low, there seems no “high” they can now achieve.

The “Our First 100 Days” cash grab is just another example of it.