This song is timeless, and nearly 20 years after its creation, still possesses the mystique it did the first time i heard it ~1994. To me, at first blush, all those years ago, it had some kind of homo-erotic allure. The line "so that the others may do" tells of something which must be done for others to follow suit. It felt like like some kind of roxy-glam-pop invitation to sexual liberation.
Upon further introspection I think the song may not have an intrinsic meaning, but simply represents a sort of "holding open the door" for people who otherwise might be affronted by this song/band's unusual style. I know, as a sort of armchair rock-historian, that there have been few bands so daring and so true to the sound that wanted to emerge from within, whether the creator wanted it or not. This band handled it with elegance and grace seldom, if ever, seen.
I’m open arms and ready for the end. Sell me to the sea and let me be one with the wind. Such a glorious apocalypse. Our thrones have burned to the ground. We have ruined a life worth living. We have done ourselves in. The muffled screams will now be heard along with the voices that’ve never spoken. This is the end of the youth that I knew. I would die for a generation of lost souls. A generation of so many lost souls. We were meant for ruin.
Lyrics submitted by demimondaine
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It is a sarcastic jab at how she views herself and how her "ex-lovers" only wanted to be with her to increase their fame.
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It is expected so Swift is giving the media what they want and profiting off the attention.

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