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Kadizzle, Ry Cooder, and the Vigilante Man
Kadizzle has officially become an extreme Ry Cooder fan.
There are musicians you admire. There are musicians you respect. And then there are musicians whose songs crawl inside your head and refuse to leave. Cooder has a way of doing that.
One song in particular has been haunting Kadizzle lately: Jesus and Woody.
It’s not loud. It’s not flashy. It doesn’t scream. It simply observes. And in observing, it cuts.
There’s a line in the song that refers to Trump as a “vigilante man.” That phrase stuck with me. I had to look up the word vigilante to make sure I was using it correctly.
A vigilante is someone who takes the law into his own hands because he believes the law is inadequate. He believes the system is too slow, too weak, too compromised — so he substitutes himself for it.
Sound familiar?
Trump operates from the premise that he is the law. If he doesn’t like a court ruling, it’s corrupt. If he doesn’t like an election result, it’s rigged. If he doesn’t like a prosecutor, it’s political. If he doesn’t like the Constitution, it’s inconvenient.
A vigilante man believes his instincts outrank institutions.
That’s the danger.
In a functioning republic, no one gets to appoint himself judge, jury, and executioner. The rule of law depends on something very unfashionable these days: restraint. It depends on process. It depends on accepting outcomes you don’t personally prefer.
The vigilante mindset rejects all that.
It says:
I know better.
I alone can fix it.
Rules are for other people.
Ry Cooder didn’t have to shout to make his point. He just laid it down in a song. Music has a way of distilling truth into a few simple lines that a thousand political speeches can’t match.
Kadizzle keeps replaying that phrase — “vigilante man.” The more I think about it, the more it fits. Not because it’s dramatic. Not because it’s partisan. But because it describes a worldview.
When a leader starts believing he stands above the law instead of beneath it, the country doesn’t become stronger. It becomes fragile.
That’s why the song lingers.
Sometimes it takes a guitar and a quiet voice to explain what cable news never quite can.
Kadizzle will keep listening.
And thinking.