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compared2what? wrote:deputies are barely worth thinking about, let alone shooting.
OP ED wrote:maybe the sheriff shot the deputy, and was himself fired upon when Nattie attempted to intervene on his deputy's behalf.
c2w? wrote:There's some other metaphorical action going on in there, too, imo. But luckily for everyone, you didn't ask about it.
compared2what? wrote:Everything he says is true....
Answers: (a) shoot the sheriff, not shoot the deputy; (b) a righteous act not an offense; and (c) True Nature embodied.
He never acknowledges a crime, notice.* He says he shot the sheriff. Repeatedly. And that if he is guilty, he will pay. In other words: "I proudly take responsibility for shooting the sheriff." Or "Say it loud, I shot the sheriff and am proud." Or -- and imo, this one is what he is most emphatically saying, and why he sings the line so often and so insistently -- "Shooting the sheriff is who I (and I) am. And I know that truth with a conviction that ultimately trumps everything else. The true world is mine, no matter how the false world sees and disposes of me, which is -- PS -- by systematically oppressing and silencing me. And good luck with that, Babylon. Because what is to be must be. So just let that bucket continue to go a well every day, the bottom'll drop out sooner or later."
That Bob Marley was a great, great artist. And not too bad-looking, either.
... he was acting in accordance with his better (and only true) nature. As must be, freedom having come his way that day, sheriff-shooting could not but also. They're not separable. Because they're not two things. It's a very fatalistic song. Kind of like the Nibelungenlied of reggae.
My point was that it doesn't matter who shot the deputy, if anyone shot the deputy, if there even was a deputy, because Nattie has already told you the only deputy-shooting-related thing that's of any true importance to him or to the meaning of the song: He didn't...
JackRiddler wrote:.
c2w, You speak the truth!
compared2what? wrote:Everything he says is true....
Answers: (a) shoot the sheriff, not shoot the deputy; (b) a righteous act not an offense; and (c) True Nature embodied.
He never acknowledges a crime, notice.* He says he shot the sheriff. Repeatedly. And that if he is guilty, he will pay. In other words: "I proudly take responsibility for shooting the sheriff." Or "Say it loud, I shot the sheriff and am proud." Or -- and imo, this one is what he is most emphatically saying, and why he sings the line so often and so insistently -- "Shooting the sheriff is who I (and I) am. And I know that truth with a conviction that ultimately trumps everything else. The true world is mine, no matter how the false world sees and disposes of me, which is -- PS -- by systematically oppressing and silencing me. And good luck with that, Babylon. Because what is to be must be. So just let that bucket continue to go a well every day, the bottom'll drop out sooner or later."
That Bob Marley was a great, great artist. And not too bad-looking, either.
Oh yah!... he was acting in accordance with his better (and only true) nature. As must be, freedom having come his way that day, sheriff-shooting could not but also. They're not separable. Because they're not two things. It's a very fatalistic song. Kind of like the Nibelungenlied of reggae.
Beautiful.
(& great song/video by Outkast.)
So, here's where we still diverge. I can't see this:My point was that it doesn't matter who shot the deputy, if anyone shot the deputy, if there even was a deputy, because Nattie has already told you the only deputy-shooting-related thing that's of any true importance to him or to the meaning of the song: He didn't...
Because the fate of the deputy seems important to him. Every time he says he shot the Sheriff, he also says he didn't shoot a deputy, which apparently would be a terrible, base thing to do.
And he asks: Where was the deputy? This tends against the idea, which I would otherwise welcome, that sheriff and deputy are actually two views of the same man (as in: Babylon says I shot an appointed servant, a deputy just doing his job, but I know it was Babylon itself that I shot, the Man, and righteously so).
As I ask the following, I must acknowledge the risk of seeing too much through the lens of Western liberal individualism, with its over-layered moral categories and "shades of grey" sometimes letting complexity obscure simple truths and veering into portrayals of the oppressed as culpable and of oppression as an unavoidable existential state, but still:
Is there no room here for the idea that the freedom-coming and sheriff-shooting in some way also entailed deputy-shooting, perhaps as the unintended consequence? Is the life of the Deputy the price of the Sheriff-shooting, and is the song in part about Nattie's struggle with that?
compared2what? wrote:Really? Try here, here here, or here.
Then, if all of those fail, you could also try searching either "Bombs Over Baghdad" and "Outkast" or "B.O.B." and "Outkast". Because that's gotta at least get you to the lyrics, right? I'm sure it will, and probably to the whole video. But just to be on the safe side, it's Dre's opinion that you shouldn't even bang unless you plan to hit something.
And I feel that it never hurts to bear that in mind, personally.
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