![]() Out of all the injustices he saw, Marley offered ways to channel frustration and rage into productive action. ![]() He described the conditions for people in the world's worst ghettos on songs like " Concrete Jungle" and " Johnny Was." He enumerated the realities of racism on tracks like " War." "Until the philosophy which holds one race superior and another inferior is finally and permanently discredited and abandoned, everywhere is war, me say war," Marley sang, paraphrasing a speech given by former Ethiopian emperor Haile Selassie. His main targets were the Western capitalist system and the decay caused by greed and exploitation. The vast majority of Marley's music was radical and politically uncompromising, stretching far beyond the reductive stoner version in the Western popular conception. "Me a rebel, man." That's why it's important to remember Marley as he really was.
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