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Reply #30 posted 06/25/09 11:25am

Love2tha9s

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nyse said:[quote]ernestsewell said:[quote]

144,000 in total are going to heaven. I've yet to find where Christ said THAT in the New Testament. It's heresy.


it's in the book of revelations....


I think this is prince's 2nd spiritual album...the 1st beeing lovesexy...
And it is about prince's new Relationship with GOD...I'm not JW but I agree and relate with many things Prince is singing about....Great album
[Edited 6/25/09 11:21am]


Its only like that in the J.W.'s version of the New Testament revelation. In the regular New Testament it says the 144,000 are witnesses on the planet to evangelize the unsaved as one last chance to be redeemed during the great tribulation before final judgement. Oh crap, now i'm involved in a religous discussion which I always promise myself to stay out of.

I guess it couldn't be avoided in this case as I was just seriously seeking understandment of the album.
[Edited 6/25/09 11:26am]
"Why'd I waste my kisses on you baby?" R.I.P. Prince You've finally found your way back home. Well Done.
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Reply #31 posted 06/25/09 11:31am

L4OATheOrigina
l

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Love2tha9s said:[quote]nyse said:[quote]

ernestsewell said:



144,000 in total are going to heaven. I've yet to find where Christ said THAT in the New Testament. It's heresy.


it's in the book of revelations....


I think this is prince's 2nd spiritual album...the 1st beeing lovesexy...
And it is about prince's new Relationship with GOD...I'm not JW but I agree and relate with many things Prince is singing about....Great album
[Edited 6/25/09 11:21am]


Its only like that in the J.W.'s version of the New Testament revelation. In the regular New Testament it says the 144,000 are witnesses on the planet to evangelize the unsaved as one last chance to be redeemed during the great tribulation before final judgement. Oh crap, now i'm involved in a religous discussion which I always promise myself to stay out of.

I guess it couldn't be avoided in this case as I was just seriously seeking understandment of the album.
[Edited 6/25/09 11:26am]


lol at least i won't try 2 make this a religious discussion either as much as possible, but if u were 2 line up every single type of bible (king james, new living translation, new world translation etc etc) and just reading one verse from each of them, they all have different wordings ..so confusion is not unheard of
man, he has such an amazing body of music that it's sad to see him constrict it down to the basics. he's too talented for the lineup he's doing. estelle 81
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Reply #32 posted 06/25/09 11:32am

Graycap23

2elijah said:

L4OATheOriginal said:



BINGO we have a winner thumbs up!


True, and not like it was a lie.
[Edited 6/25/09 11:24am]

Why worry about something as insignificant as the..... truth?
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Reply #33 posted 06/25/09 11:39am

2elijah

Graycap23 said:

2elijah said:



True, and not like it was a lie.
[Edited 6/25/09 11:24am]

Why worry about something as insignificant as the..... truth?


What I got from the part of that song, was that it may have been referencing that those of the jewish faith was involved in the slave trade as well, and owned slaves who carried their surnames.

If that is indeed fact, how would that be anti-semitic unless he said something "derogatory" about jewish people in that track. I haven't listened to that track in a while, and don't believe I heard anything derogatory said about them. If someone wrote in a history book that those of the Jewish faith also owned slaves during the slavery days in America, would one consider that anti-semitic, especially if nothing derogatory is mentioned within that statement? Not being sarcastic, just curious as to how one of jewish faith would take that.
[Edited 6/25/09 11:41am]
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Reply #34 posted 06/25/09 11:43am

JudasLChrist

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2elijah said:

Graycap23 said:


Why worry about something as insignificant as the..... truth?


What I got from the part of that song when he was calling out the jewish names was that they it was referencing they were part of the slave trade and owned slaves who carried their surnames as well.

If that is indeed fact, how would that be anti-semitic unless he said something "derogatory" about jewish people in that track. I haven't listened to that track in a while, and don't believe I heard anything derogatory said about them. If someone wrote in a history book that those of the Jewish faith also owned slaves during the slavery days in America, would one consider that anti-semitic, especially if nothing derogatory is mentioned within that statement? Just curious as to how one of jewish faith would take that.


The anti-semetic part might be how he singles them out. African tribal kings were involved in the slave trade as well as all sorts of other people. The Jews were also slaves as well throughout history. What point is Prince trying to make? That Jews enslaved blacks in the past and contiue to give blacks the shaft in the present? That's fucked up and doesn't even begin to tell the truth.
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Reply #35 posted 06/25/09 11:43am

Graycap23

2elijah said:

Graycap23 said:


Why worry about something as insignificant as the..... truth?


What I got from the part of that song, was that it may have been referencing that those of the jewish faith was involved in the slave trade as well, and owned slaves who carried their surnames.

If that is indeed fact, how would that be anti-semitic unless he said something "derogatory" about jewish people in that track. I haven't listened to that track in a while, and don't believe I heard anything derogatory said about them. If someone wrote in a history book that those of the Jewish faith also owned slaves during the slavery days in America, would one consider that anti-semitic, especially if nothing derogatory is mentioned within that statement? Not being sarcastic, just curious as to how one of jewish faith would take that.
[Edited 6/25/09 11:41am]

Don't get me started.
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Reply #36 posted 06/25/09 11:43am

ernestsewell

nyse said:[quote]ernestsewell said:[quote]

144,000 in total are going to heaven. I've yet to find where Christ said THAT in the New Testament. It's heresy.


it's in the book of revelations....


It still doesn't say that ONLY those 144,000 are the ONLY ones going to heaven. That's a fallacy on the JW's part.
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Reply #37 posted 06/25/09 11:44am

L4OATheOrigina
l

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JudasLChrist said:

2elijah said:



What I got from the part of that song when he was calling out the jewish names was that they it was referencing they were part of the slave trade and owned slaves who carried their surnames as well.

If that is indeed fact, how would that be anti-semitic unless he said something "derogatory" about jewish people in that track. I haven't listened to that track in a while, and don't believe I heard anything derogatory said about them. If someone wrote in a history book that those of the Jewish faith also owned slaves during the slavery days in America, would one consider that anti-semitic, especially if nothing derogatory is mentioned within that statement? Just curious as to how one of jewish faith would take that.


The anti-semetic part might be how he singles them out. African tribal kings were involved in the slave trade as well as all sorts of other people. The Jews were also slaves as well throughout history. What point is Prince trying to make? That Jews enslaved blacks in the past and contiue to give blacks the shaft in the present? That's fucked up and doesn't even begin to tell the truth.



careful now...
man, he has such an amazing body of music that it's sad to see him constrict it down to the basics. he's too talented for the lineup he's doing. estelle 81
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Reply #38 posted 06/25/09 11:45am

L4OATheOrigina
l

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ernestsewell said:[quote]nyse said:[quote]

ernestsewell said:



144,000 in total are going to heaven. I've yet to find where Christ said THAT in the New Testament. It's heresy.


it's in the book of revelations....


It still doesn't say that ONLY those 144,000 are the ONLY ones going to heaven. That's a fallacy on the JW's part.


i've heard that said way b4 i ever encountered with any JW's in my life. my grandmother used 2 tell me that and she was a baptist
man, he has such an amazing body of music that it's sad to see him constrict it down to the basics. he's too talented for the lineup he's doing. estelle 81
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Reply #39 posted 06/25/09 11:48am

ernestsewell

L4OATheOriginal said:

ernestsewell said:



It still doesn't say that ONLY those 144,000 are the ONLY ones going to heaven. That's a fallacy on the JW's part.


i've heard that said way b4 i ever encountered with any JW's in my life. my grandmother used 2 tell me that and she was a baptist


I was raised Independent Baptist, which was 10x worse and more strict than the Southern Baptists. I'd NEVER heard of the 144,000 being the ONLY people going to heaven.
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Reply #40 posted 06/25/09 11:49am

Byron

Love2tha9s said:

Genesia said:



Which is why all the other names are stereotypically Jewish names...like Rosenbloom, Pearlman, and Goldstruck.


Well I have to agree with you on that one, I could understand the point he was originally making but no reason to use just Jewish names after the fact, unless he is accusing Jewish people of being slave owners as well?

My assumption was always this:

Prince, at the time anyway, was leaning more towards a viewpoint that Blacks had been thru the same types of atrocities as Jews, but not given the same level of outrage, condemnation and recourse, both in the States and worldwide, as Jews were afforded. The perception being one of African Americans being told to "get over it" concerning things like slavery, etc...and he probably fell in line with others who would, say, compare how the holocaust was viewed in the U.S. to how slavery was viewed, how Jews were "given their own country" as where black slaves were given land (40 acres and a mule), only to have most of it stolen back by the KKK or even the government. Within that discourse would come a natural comparison between the plight Jews have faced and the plight Blacks have faced.

So when you get to a song like "Family Name", Prince brings up the whole "get over it" argument he probably felt is used too much towards blacks ("You might say, 'What U mad about?'..")...then goes on to compare the names blacks have been anchored with ("Lynch", for instance...not a good name for a race who was regularly lynched publicly to cheering crowds) to the names Jews have ("Rosenbloom", "Pearlman"...Rose In Bloom...Pearl...get it? lol)...I never even slightly got the impression that Prince was blaming Jews for stripping away blacks' family "names" and african heritage.

So why compare black family names to the family names of jews? I'm guessing to illustrate how blacks in this country have had it just as bad, if not worse, than Jews have had it...but that he believed people in the U.S. aren't nearly as willing to acknowledge it to the same level, probably because slavery is "our" national shame, as where the holocaust is another country's shame (as well as being more recent). He also wanted to point out areas in which he probably felt the majority of U.S. citizens didn't really appreciate the full level of harm centuries of slavery and racism placed on the black race...I actually thought singing about how being saddled with your slave master's last name was an ultimate insult was pretty damn clever, myself.

Prince was becoming a bit militant at the time, which turned off some of his fans...it's ok in everyone's eyes if he's being militant towards sexual attitudes, of course lol wink...when the target is politics or religion, it's a bit dicier.


...
[Edited 6/25/09 11:52am]
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Reply #41 posted 06/25/09 11:50am

Genesia

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L4OATheOriginal said:

JudasLChrist said:



The anti-semetic part might be how he singles them out. African tribal kings were involved in the slave trade as well as all sorts of other people. The Jews were also slaves as well throughout history. What point is Prince trying to make? That Jews enslaved blacks in the past and contiue to give blacks the shaft in the present? That's fucked up and doesn't even begin to tell the truth.



careful now...


Careful now? What the heck does that mean?
We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #42 posted 06/25/09 11:52am

Giovanni777

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L4OATheOriginal said:

Love2tha9s said:

I know a bunch of people hate it because they say its preachy and its in code about religion or jehovah witness stuff but honestly i've listened all the way through it at least once and I don't know truly the point he's trying to get across so could someone who does understand it and its ticked off by the message simply tell me wtf he's actually talking about?

No B.s. here i'm honestly confused. I wanna know.

All I get is Banished Ones, Rainbow Children and a Darth Vader narration.

Its as clear as mud to me.


not everyone hates this album i love this masterpeice. people tend 2 get all overworked on this album because of their personal belief systems and don't want 2 here their hero prince going in2 the JW faith.

this album is semi autobiographical if u really listen 2 it, and knew what was happening in prince's life at the time ..the banished ones, well one of them was mayte 4 sure..the muse is mani ..the rainbow children could b interpeted as the new power generation as a whole and not just the band members.

the only thing i hate is how people always say "the darth vader voice" it's the same voice he's used throughout his career on tracks like bob george
, the whole tora tora character on exodus, temptation etc etc ..

JAMES EARL JONES IS NOT ON THE RAINBOW CHILDREN ALBUM so spread the word ..and stop referring 2 it as the darth vader voice rolleyes
[Edited 6/25/09 10:56am]


Couldn't have said any of that any better!

clapping

As far as the voice thing, I've said that many times. Don't know why folks don't see that, and dig it.

I like it.

Musically, 'The Rainbow Children' is Prince's most continuous, thematic album ever, and Prince's musical freedom, on nearly all instruments, is refreshing. The album has the quality I most respect in any album... It's timeless, and can be played many times, while still remaining fresh. LONGEVITY.

.
[Edited 6/25/09 11:54am]
"He's a musician's musician..."
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Reply #43 posted 06/25/09 11:54am

Genesia

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Byron said:

Love2tha9s said:



Well I have to agree with you on that one, I could understand the point he was originally making but no reason to use just Jewish names after the fact, unless he is accusing Jewish people of being slave owners as well?

My assumption was always this:

Prince, at the time anyway, was leaning more towards a viewpoint that Blacks had been thru the same types of atrocities as Jews, but not given the same level of outrage, condemnation and recourse, both in the States and worldwide, as Jews were afforded. The perception being one of African Americans being told to "get over it" concerning things like slavery, etc...and he probably fell in line with others who would, say, compare how the holocaust was viewed in the U.S. to how slavery was viewed, how Jews were "given their own country" as where black slaves were given land (40 acres and a mule), only to have most of it stolen back by the KKK or even the government. Within that discourse would come a natural comparison between the plight Jews have faced and the plight Blacks have faced.

So when you get to a song like "Family Name", Prince brings up the whole "get over it" argument he probably felt is used too much towards blacks ("You might say, 'What U mad about?'..")...then goes on to compare the names blacks have been anchored with ("Lynch", for instance...not a good name for a race who was regularly lynched publicly to cheering crowds) to the names Jews have ("Rosenbloom", "Pearlman"...Rose In Bloom...Pearl...get it? lol)...I never even slightly got the impression that Prince was blaming Jews for stripping away blacks' family "names" and african heritage.

So why compare black family names to the family names of jews? I'm guessing to illustrate how blacks in this country have had it just as bad, if not worse, than Jews have had it...but that he believed people in the U.S. aren't nearly as willing to acknowledge it to the same level, probably because slavery is "our" national shame, as where the holocaust is another country's shame (as well as being more recent). He also wanted to point out areas in which he probably felt the majority of U.S. citizens didn't really appreciate the full level of harm centuries of slavery and racism placed on the black race...I actually thought singing about being saddled with your slave master's last name was an ultimate insult was pretty damn clever, myself.

Prince was becoming a bit militant at the time, which turned off some of his fans...it's ok in everyone's eyes if he's being militant towards sexual attitudes, of course lol wink...when the target is politics or religion, it's a bit dicier.


But (if what you say it true - and I certainly think it's plausible)...why does he seek to make his (valid) point on the backs of others who've had it just as bad?

Because when you do that, you muddy your argument. This thread (and the kajillion others on the same subject) is proof of that.
We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #44 posted 06/25/09 11:58am

2elijah

JudasLChrist said:

2elijah said:



What I got from the part of that song when he was calling out the jewish names was that they it was referencing they were part of the slave trade and owned slaves who carried their surnames as well.

If that is indeed fact, how would that be anti-semitic unless he said something "derogatory" about jewish people in that track. I haven't listened to that track in a while, and don't believe I heard anything derogatory said about them. If someone wrote in a history book that those of the Jewish faith also owned slaves during the slavery days in America, would one consider that anti-semitic, especially if nothing derogatory is mentioned within that statement? Just curious as to how one of jewish faith would take that.


The anti-semetic part might be how he singles them out. African tribal kings were involved in the slave trade as well as all sorts of other people. The Jews were also slaves as well throughout history. uth.



I am aware that some Africans were involved with the slave trade as well, but would not be insulted or deny it, if someone said they were, because it is a fact, however, slavery is wrong no matter who was involved, past or present.

But if this is true about those of the jewish faith owning slaves, and you have African-Americans today walking around with jewish surnames, why would you be angry at a "fact?"


JudasLChrist
:
What point is Prince trying to make? That Jews enslaved blacks in the past and contiue to give blacks the shaft in the present? That's fucked up and doesn't even begin to tell the truth.


For whatever reason he mentioned those of the "jewish faith", I cannot answer, and I don't think anyone can, including me, other than draw "assumptions" from the lyrics, I think if he had mentioned others, not of faith but by race/ethnic group, i.e, French, English, Dutch, etc., then I think members of those specific group(s) would have probably asked the same questions you and others have about why they were singled out.

.
[Edited 6/25/09 12:00pm]
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Reply #45 posted 06/25/09 11:59am

Byron

Genesia said:

Byron said:


My assumption was always this:

Prince, at the time anyway, was leaning more towards a viewpoint that Blacks had been thru the same types of atrocities as Jews, but not given the same level of outrage, condemnation and recourse, both in the States and worldwide, as Jews were afforded. The perception being one of African Americans being told to "get over it" concerning things like slavery, etc...and he probably fell in line with others who would, say, compare how the holocaust was viewed in the U.S. to how slavery was viewed, how Jews were "given their own country" as where black slaves were given land (40 acres and a mule), only to have most of it stolen back by the KKK or even the government. Within that discourse would come a natural comparison between the plight Jews have faced and the plight Blacks have faced.

So when you get to a song like "Family Name", Prince brings up the whole "get over it" argument he probably felt is used too much towards blacks ("You might say, 'What U mad about?'..")...then goes on to compare the names blacks have been anchored with ("Lynch", for instance...not a good name for a race who was regularly lynched publicly to cheering crowds) to the names Jews have ("Rosenbloom", "Pearlman"...Rose In Bloom...Pearl...get it? lol)...I never even slightly got the impression that Prince was blaming Jews for stripping away blacks' family "names" and african heritage.

So why compare black family names to the family names of jews? I'm guessing to illustrate how blacks in this country have had it just as bad, if not worse, than Jews have had it...but that he believed people in the U.S. aren't nearly as willing to acknowledge it to the same level, probably because slavery is "our" national shame, as where the holocaust is another country's shame (as well as being more recent). He also wanted to point out areas in which he probably felt the majority of U.S. citizens didn't really appreciate the full level of harm centuries of slavery and racism placed on the black race...I actually thought singing about being saddled with your slave master's last name was an ultimate insult was pretty damn clever, myself.

Prince was becoming a bit militant at the time, which turned off some of his fans...it's ok in everyone's eyes if he's being militant towards sexual attitudes, of course lol wink...when the target is politics or religion, it's a bit dicier.


But (if what you say it true - and I certainly think it's plausible)...why does he seek to make his (valid) point on the backs of others who've had it just as bad?

Because when you do that, you muddy your argument. This thread (and the kajillion others on the same subject) is proof of that.

Oh, I agree it does risk muddying up the debate...it wouldn't be an avenue I would take to make the same points. But, that IS one of the ways some people use to champion their cause and try to get people to see it in a different light.

You have animal rights advocates comparing cattle slaughterhouses to the holocaust. Is it valid? Debatable. Does it chance muddying up the debate? You betcha. You have people comparing Bush to Hitler (or even Obama to Hitler now). Actually, both the holocaust and Hitler are commonly used as comparisons, I've found. Prince brought up the comparison again in "Muse 2 The Pharaoh", as a way of saying "who really had it worse, people?"...
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Reply #46 posted 06/25/09 12:03pm

Genesia

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Byron said:

Genesia said:



But (if what you say it true - and I certainly think it's plausible)...why does he seek to make his (valid) point on the backs of others who've had it just as bad?

Because when you do that, you muddy your argument. This thread (and the kajillion others on the same subject) is proof of that.

Oh, I agree it does risk muddying up the debate...it wouldn't be an avenue I would take to make the same points. But, that IS one of the ways some people use to champion their cause and try to get people to see it in a different light.

You have animal rights advocates comparing cattle slaughterhouses to the holocaust. Is it valid? Debatable. Does it chance muddying up the debate? You betcha. You have people comparing Bush to Hitler (or even Obama to Hitler now). Actually, both the holocaust and Hitler are commonly used as comparisons, I've found. Prince brought up the comparison again in "Muse 2 The Pharaoh", as a way of saying "who really had it worse, people?"...


Thank you! I knew he said something to that effect...but thought it was in Family Name. When I couldn't find it there, I thought I was losing my mind.

What this tells me, however, is that the "name thing" was no accident.
We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #47 posted 06/25/09 12:08pm

Byron

Genesia said:

Byron said:


Oh, I agree it does risk muddying up the debate...it wouldn't be an avenue I would take to make the same points. But, that IS one of the ways some people use to champion their cause and try to get people to see it in a different light.

You have animal rights advocates comparing cattle slaughterhouses to the holocaust. Is it valid? Debatable. Does it chance muddying up the debate? You betcha. You have people comparing Bush to Hitler (or even Obama to Hitler now). Actually, both the holocaust and Hitler are commonly used as comparisons, I've found. Prince brought up the comparison again in "Muse 2 The Pharaoh", as a way of saying "who really had it worse, people?"...


Thank you! I knew he said something to that effect...but thought it was in Family Name. When I couldn't find it there, I thought I was losing my mind.

What this tells me, however, is that the "name thing" was no accident.

I don't think anyone on here (or anywhere) is saying the "Family Name thing" was an accident, though lol...it's obvious it's purposeful. The debate, though, is what that purpose is. I don't think merely comparing slavery to the holocaust and saying "which was worse" is antisemetic. I don't think comparing black American family names to jewish American family names and saying "which is worse" is antisemetic.

Changing "Goldberg" to "Goldstruck", though, might be lol...
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Reply #48 posted 06/25/09 12:12pm

2elijah

Byron, I believe you just summed it up.

Byron said:


Prince, at the time anyway, was leaning more towards a viewpoint that Blacks had been thru the same types of atrocities as Jews, but not given the same level of outrage, condemnation and recourse, both in the States and worldwide, as Jews were afforded......
.....So when you get to a song like "Family Name", Prince brings up the whole "get over it" argument he probably felt is used too much towards blacks ("You might say, 'What U mad about?'..")...


I agree with this. The "Get over it" is such a common response. It's almost like when mentioning slavery or crimes related to that of America's past, it is pretty much "belittled" by many, so to speak. Mention of an "apology or reparations" to descendants of African/African-American slaves often sparks major criticism adn anger from many.

Not to mention very "little" media coverage last week about the recent "Apology to African-Americans for slavery/segregation" that Senator Tom Harkin read on the Senate floor" now waiting to be passed by the House. It did not receive much coverage in the media. I had to search for it on the net, and found a vid of it on youtube. Pretty much went unnoticed by much of the media as "unimportant", yet they plan on having a "celebration on Capital Hill on July 7th" in reference to this "apology" passing.

Whoopy-do.. lol
[Edited 6/25/09 12:21pm]
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Reply #49 posted 06/25/09 12:19pm

1725topp

ernestsewell said:

First clue is on the title track when he says the Rainbow Children are flying on the wings of the "New Translation". That is the version of the Bible that JW's use. It's unlike any other translation. It debunks Christ being the son of God in being the Savior of the world. They don't fully acknowledge the trinity of God, Son, and Holy Spirit. (You can even see a pic of his New Translation bible in the 21 Nights book.)

The banished ones are those who don't believe in the JW g-d, and dispute the word of g-d. Unlike Protestant religions, JW's believe they are the ONLY ones going to heaven, and yet out of 300,000,000 people just in America, apparently only 144,000 in total are going to heaven. I've yet to find where Christ said THAT in the New Testament. It's heresy.

As far as the voice...well, who knows. Maybe he just didn't want HIS voice on it, but rather a deep, more g-d like voice, telling the story.

JudasLChrist was right about the Goldberg thing and the anti-Jewish statements. Yes, we know blacks had their names changed when they came here. But so did anyone else who showed up at Ellis Island 80 years ago. It's very segregated thinking on Prince's part.

He chants about theocratic order and how women are below men. Well in some regards, the Bible has referred to women as the "weaker vessel", but that doesn't mean they're less able to perform any function a man can. Women are very prominent in the Bible, as teachers, preachers, apostles, etc. JW's refuse to acknowledge this.

It's basically Prince saying "My way or the highway." He's even chanted about dead blood (JW's don't believe in blood transfusions) in another song not on TRC. (Slaughterhouse?)


Some of what you say is not exactly correct, at least from my couple of years of study with a JW. Now, I am not a JW because after two years of study, I could not accept that one was not supposed to be politically active. But, there are some assertions that you make, which are not true.

For one, in my two years of study, I was never told that they do not accept Jesus as the son of God. Can you please reference something from their literature that asserts that? I know that they have changed their stance on some beliefs, but I would like to see where they have it written in the literature, including the New World Translation, that they do not accept Jesus as the son of God. In fact, for the entire two years of study, we would close our opening and closing prayer with "in Jesus name, Amen."

Next, the word "trinity" never appears in any version of the Bible, especially the King James Version. The concept of "trinity" is of Catholic origin, but the word itself never appears in the Bible. However, if you can show it to me in the King James Version, I will yield and say that I am wrong.

Third, JW are not asserting that only 144,000 are going to heaven. In fact, if you read the actual scripture in the Revelations, it reads that at the first look there are 144,000 faithful, and when John looks further there is a multitude to great number. The 144,000 are those who will serve as Jesus’ cabinet, for lack of a better term. The 144,000 will be like teachers and administrators for the others in paradise. Now, I'll admit that I had some problem completely understanding this concept also, but it shows that JW are not telling people that only 144,000 will go to heaven. Well, let me modify that because JW believe that Earth will be the Paradise or Utopia because "the meek will inherit the Earth," not heaven. So, that multitude to great to number will exist in perfect paradise on heaven, and the other 144,000 will exist between the paradise Earth and heaven.

The deep voice I take just for dramatic effect, which is what you said. Sometimes I think its lame and sometimes I don't, but I love TRC.

As for the so-called "anti-Jewish statements" I will yield because I can see where one can get that interpretation. However, I take it more as a metaphoric thing where Prince tries to link Jewish and African struggles while also commenting on the fragile relationship that African Americans and Jews have had since the early days of the Civil Right Movement. There are many African Americans who think that Jews have moreso pimped the CRM while they also discriminated against African Americans. Of course, this is all in how one sees or views it based on what they are bringing to the table of perception, and Prince could have been more articulate on this point.

Again, if you can show me where I am wrong on my thoughts, I am more than willing to yield.
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Reply #50 posted 06/25/09 12:23pm

Darwintheorgan
grinder

There is also some fishy stuff going on in Muse 2 the Pharaoh. "Holocaust aside many lived and died when all truth is told would you rather be dead or be sold." This is clearly stating that the horrors of slavery were worse than the horrors of the holocaust. There is no need to compare the two, they were both terrible.
I abdicated the throne in Ithaca, but now I am...
Albany's Number 1 Prince Fan
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Reply #51 posted 06/25/09 12:25pm

Genesia

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Byron said:

Genesia said:



Thank you! I knew he said something to that effect...but thought it was in Family Name. When I couldn't find it there, I thought I was losing my mind.

What this tells me, however, is that the "name thing" was no accident.

I don't think anyone on here (or anywhere) is saying the "Family Name thing" was an accident, though lol...it's obvious it's purposeful. The debate, though, is what that purpose is. I don't think merely comparing slavery to the holocaust and saying "which was worse" is antisemetic. I don't think comparing black American family names to jewish American family names and saying "which is worse" is antisemetic.

Changing "Goldberg" to "Goldstruck", though, might be lol...


Well, I happen to think lyrics like, "Holocaust aside" or "would you rather be dead or be sold" are anti-semitic - in the sense that he minimizes a crime perpetrated against a very specific group of people to make his own point. I interpret "would you rather be dead or be sold" as saying that Hitler did Jews a favor by just killing them instead of turning them into slaves (completely ignoring the fact that millions were enslaved and then killed).

Now, I will grant that maybe he used the Holocaust simply because it was the most blatant example of a crime against humanity he could think of. But my feeling is that slavery was horror enough on its own terms. Making the point doesn't require diminishing what happened to anyone else.
We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #52 posted 06/25/09 12:30pm

Byron

Darwintheorgangrinder said:

There is also some fishy stuff going on in Muse 2 the Pharaoh. "Holocaust aside many lived and died when all truth is told would you rather be dead or be sold." This is clearly stating that the horrors of slavery were worse than the horrors of the holocaust. There is no need to compare the two, they were both terrible.

Why, though, do you think Prince said "Holocaust aside"?...Aside usually means "other than" or "set apart from"...if you took that lyric literally, Prince is actually saying "Setting aside the holocaust, many people have lived and died...but how many people have been sold? And ask yourself, which would be worse for you right now: to die or to be sold into slavery?"

Now, I don't think he actually meant it that way...but I do keep going back to his use of the word "aside"...it seems to indicate he's NOT comparing slavery to the holocaust, not that he is. But again, I just assumed that he used the wrong word there lol...maybe I shouldn't, though.
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Reply #53 posted 06/25/09 12:33pm

Genesia

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Byron said:

Darwintheorgangrinder said:

There is also some fishy stuff going on in Muse 2 the Pharaoh. "Holocaust aside many lived and died when all truth is told would you rather be dead or be sold." This is clearly stating that the horrors of slavery were worse than the horrors of the holocaust. There is no need to compare the two, they were both terrible.

Why, though, do you think Prince said "Holocaust aside"?...Aside usually means "other than" or "set apart from"...if you took that lyric literally, Prince is actually saying "Setting aside the holocaust, many people have lived and died...but how many people have been sold? And ask yourself, which would be worse for you right now: to die or to be sold into slavery?"

Now, I don't think he actually meant it that way...but I do keep going back to his use of the word "aside"...it seems to indicate he's NOT comparing slavery to the holocaust, not that he is. But again, I just assumed that he used the wrong word there lol...maybe I shouldn't, though.


I think he said "aside" because it rhymes with "died" - not really thinking about what he was saying.
We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #54 posted 06/25/09 12:35pm

Byron

Genesia said:

Byron said:


I don't think anyone on here (or anywhere) is saying the "Family Name thing" was an accident, though lol...it's obvious it's purposeful. The debate, though, is what that purpose is. I don't think merely comparing slavery to the holocaust and saying "which was worse" is antisemetic. I don't think comparing black American family names to jewish American family names and saying "which is worse" is antisemetic.

Changing "Goldberg" to "Goldstruck", though, might be lol...


Well, I happen to think lyrics like, "Holocaust aside" or "would you rather be dead or be sold" are anti-semitic - in the sense that he minimizes a crime perpetrated against a very specific group of people to make his own point. I interpret "would you rather be dead or be sold" as saying that Hitler did Jews a favor by just killing them instead of turning them into slaves (completely ignoring the fact that millions were enslaved and then killed).

That's a HUGE stretch on your part, though..."doing them a favor"? I don't think that was Prince's intent at all in that song.


Now, I will grant that maybe he used the Holocaust simply because it was the most blatant example of a crime against humanity he could think of. But my feeling is that slavery was horror enough on its own terms. Making the point doesn't require diminishing what happened to anyone else.

How does pointing out that he felt something else was even worse than the holocaust in his eyes equate to diminishing the holocaust? Not to oversimplify things, but it would be like me saying Lovesexy is better than Purple Rain, and someone saying I don't need to "diminish" Purple Rain in order to talk about how good Lovesexy is lol...I agree that comparing atrocities definitely borders on tacky, but I can't automatically shove it into the anti-semetic category by default. I don't think there's a single topic of discussion that automatically gets you labeled by merely bringing it up. It depends on the context in which you bring it up, and the point wanting to be made.
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Reply #55 posted 06/25/09 12:39pm

Graycap23

Genesia said:



Well, I happen to think lyrics like, "Holocaust aside" or "would you rather be dead or be sold" are anti-semitic - .

Interesting. I see this completely the OPPOSITE way. It seems that Prince is saying, DEATH is worse than being sold. At least when u are sold, u are still alive.
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Reply #56 posted 06/25/09 12:40pm

Byron

Genesia said:

Byron said:


Why, though, do you think Prince said "Holocaust aside"?...Aside usually means "other than" or "set apart from"...if you took that lyric literally, Prince is actually saying "Setting aside the holocaust, many people have lived and died...but how many people have been sold? And ask yourself, which would be worse for you right now: to die or to be sold into slavery?"

Now, I don't think he actually meant it that way...but I do keep going back to his use of the word "aside"...it seems to indicate he's NOT comparing slavery to the holocaust, not that he is. But again, I just assumed that he used the wrong word there lol...maybe I shouldn't, though.


I think he said "aside" because it rhymes with "died" - not really thinking about what he was saying.

That could be, although he seemed to be VERY thoughtful in what he was saying throughout The Rainbow Children, in my eyes...he could have just as easily said "Holocaust not denied, many lived and died...but if truth be told, would you rather be dead or be sold?". THAT, to me, would have been a clear-cut comparison between the two, and made it ridiculously clear that the deaths he was talking to were the ones that occurred during the holocaust.

The "may lived and died" part always stuck out at me as well...the holocaust isn't really known for the "many" people that lived, afterall. That part of the lyric seems like such a generic statement, almost more like "throughout the history of mankind, many people have lived and died"...
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Reply #57 posted 06/25/09 12:41pm

Genesia

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To me, he saying it's better to be dead than sold. shrug
We don’t mourn artists because we knew them. We mourn them because they helped us know ourselves.
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Reply #58 posted 06/25/09 12:42pm

tricky99

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Genesia said:

Byron said:


Why, though, do you think Prince said "Holocaust aside"?...Aside usually means "other than" or "set apart from"...if you took that lyric literally, Prince is actually saying "Setting aside the holocaust, many people have lived and died...but how many people have been sold? And ask yourself, which would be worse for you right now: to die or to be sold into slavery?"

Now, I don't think he actually meant it that way...but I do keep going back to his use of the word "aside"...it seems to indicate he's NOT comparing slavery to the holocaust, not that he is. But again, I just assumed that he used the wrong word there lol...maybe I shouldn't, though.


I think he said "aside" because it rhymes with "died" - not really thinking about what he was saying.


oh now u are being silly lol. Prince knew what he was doing when used aside. He is saying without thinking about the horrors of the holocaust. What is more an insult to humanity "death" or being treated as subhman. Its a question presented for the individual to decide. Many people have died with honor. There is no honor in being a slave.
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Reply #59 posted 06/25/09 12:42pm

Byron

Graycap23 said:

Genesia said:



Well, I happen to think lyrics like, "Holocaust aside" or "would you rather be dead or be sold" are anti-semitic - .

Interesting. I see this completely the OPPOSITE way. It seems that Prince is saying, DEATH is worse than being sold. At least when u are sold, u are still alive.

I took it as just the opposite...plus, Prince has often sung of death as the ultimate freedom/source of happiness/etc. And this album came after like 5 years of writing "Slave" on his cheek lol lol...I don't think he was putting ANYTHING beneficial to being "sold" and "human property"...
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