Also something I feel is important re: the Israelite analogy that Kendrick brings up in this album.
The entirety of DAMN. feels like it's more or less Kendrick deconstructing his self worth in the current society, and to me that extends to his beliefs which has kept him empowered for the many years he's been in this business. Fantano is right, the belief that these races have damned themselves is incredibly self flagellating - but I think that's ultimately the point.
The start of the album ends with him being killed (or rather "punished") because of him wanting to do a good deed, and the Fox News voice clip is supposed to represent the relevance that has in real life - he made a song called "Alright" which is all about positive reinforcement, a message to his community that we're all going to be okay, and yet these shmucks managed to take that positive message and twist it as a declaration of violence that does more damage than good. So when you have people twisting these intentions and when the world has deteriorated, despite the fact that Kendrick released one of the most celebrated hip hop records of all time that used it's platform to convey love and unity, it's no wonder that Kendrick feels shattered in the face of the adversity, and it's making him do all these uncharacteristic proclamations on this record - such as remotely entertaining the fact that his God has damned him by default, and that he's part of everything wrong in the world. It's why GOD is such a pathetic lamentation where he wants to be his own god.
And I think DUCKWORTH is there to represent a sort of quaint second wind, even if it isn't necessarily the end of an "arc". It opens up admitting "it was always me vs. me", as a sort of realization that he's responsible for this punishment he endures, but more importantly in the context of the album it's worth considering: if God is committed to punishing Kendrick how come God let Ducky live, and allow for this incredible chance encounter that would end with the world being blessed with one of the greatest hip hop artists of all time?
I don't know if anyone here's watched Scrubs but I think a little bit about
that one scene where Dr. Cox has a confrontation with Laverne about the latter's faith in God and how she believes "everything bad happens for a reason", especially since it's clear she uses that particular way of thinking as a coping mechanism. I actually think that reminds me a little bit of the album as a whole, considering I don't think it's any secret that Kendrick goes into self-destructive territory.
Granted, it's one thing to mix messaging like that within a lot of actually lines that are very much meant to be digested as a message, most notably XXX, but Kendrick has always been good at ambiguity - he doesn't spit statistics as much as he wants to consider the situation we are in the world, and much like Fantano said, even if he DOES believe that God is out to punish him, his race and the world, it doesn't make the music any worse.