"People confuse the outlaw and the criminal, but a real outlaw isn’t a criminal by trade. He’s someone who refuses to live by society’s established norms of behavior. He has an internal code and answers only to his own sense of honor, right, and wrong. The Outlaw doesn’t conform, he rebels. He doesn’t accept, he questions. In the end, the outlaw might change and adapt, but he bends for no man, and won’t let his life be defined by someone else. Jessie James was an outlaw, but so was Albert Einstein. I’ve been many things— father, son, husband, leader, brother, Brother and friend, but through it all I was always an Outlaw…"
"People confuse the outlaw and the criminal, but a real outlaw isn’t a criminal by trade. He’s someone who refuses to live by society’s established norms of behavior. He has an internal code and answers only to his own sense of honor, right, and wrong. The Outlaw doesn’t conform, he rebels. He doesn’t accept, he questions. In the end, the outlaw might change and adapt, but he bends for no man, and won’t let his life be defined by someone else. Jessie James was an outlaw, but so was Albert Einstein. I’ve been many things— father, son, husband, leader, brother, Brother and friend, but through it all I was always an Outlaw…"
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