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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 6 page paper which examines the theory that the Central Intelligence Agency had Bob Marley killed in May of 1981. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGmarley.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
peace and safety / A sudden destruction / Collective security for surety Yeah! / Dont forget your history / Know your destiny" (Marley Rat Race). When Bob Marley wrote
those lyrics, he wanted to emphasize that his musical art would not be politically compromised in any way. Despite his professed psychic abilities, he seemed to be unaware that
since he would not "work for no C.I.A," he would serve as its deadly pawn in its covert involvement in the political activities of Marleys beloved Jamaican homeland. When
news of the 36-year-old Rastafarian superstars death from brain cancer in 1981 spread throughout the world, few at the time suspected that it could have been a carefully orchestrated murder
plot by the Central Intelligence Agency. The story of Bob Marley does not consist simply of his impressive catalog of ballads and songs
of social protest. His life and legacy is deeply interwoven into the complex political tapestry of Jamaica. During the 1970s, Prime Minister Michael Manley was the Jamaican equivalent
of Fidel Castro, that CIA operatives reportedly sought to "destabilize" the government in hopes that the resulting chaos would bring down the government (Conally Bob Marley and the CIA).
The plan was succeeding, and by the mid-70s, violence and drugs were so rampant, martial law had to be imposed (Constantine Chanting Down Babylon: The CIA and the Death of
Bob Marley). According to Maurice Bishop, Prime Minister of nearby Grenada, this represented "the CIAs pernicious attempts [to] wreck the economy" (Constantine Chanting Down Babylon: The CIA and the
Death of Bob Marley). The unrest was building to a fever pitch by the summer of 1976, as the December Jamaican national election was drawing ever closer, and martial
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