Outlaws

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    Short Story Of Mark Grey

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    It was raining outside on this mucky day for Mark Grey. It was bad enough that he had to go to work, but everything in Hawksbuirg was bad .He thought about the shootings the fires and the limo. He hated it that the wasn't able to help out more. But he had a billion dollar company, that did little? He wished that he could stop all the bad things that happened. Little did he know that he would soon be able to do all those good things, but not now. Chapter two Arkeyen looked at the glories city

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    Vigilantes Research Paper

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    “ Beneath an overpass of the Hollywood Freeway at 1 A.M., Mr. Masters confronted two young men who were spraying graffiti, argued with them and shot them, killing one, 18-year-old Cesar Arce,” Seth Mydans Reported from The New York Times. This quote explains a vigilante trying to stop two young men who were caught doing something illegal. The vigilante then killed one of the men for their crime. Most people consider this act of brashness to be cruel and immature. But according Seth Manydan in

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    Most Wanted Men No. 12, Frank B, is a medium sized silkscreen piece created by Andy Warhol in America during 1964. Andy Warhol is known for transforming contemporary art, with his new techniques, along with his unique style of using ubiquitous and banal with ordinary objects. Frank Bellon was one of a total of thirteen men wanted for charges by the New York Police in 1962. He was charged for the fatal shooting of 22 year old Michael Macagnone on July 19, 1935 along with unlawful flight to escape

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    Vigilante, the word is a powerful one full of inspiration and fear. Inspiration for the idea of a single or group of people shrouded in anonymity are working to solve problems that would otherwise go unsolved. Vice versa there are people afraid that a single or group of people have decided to take the law into their own hands and take on a problem with little or no regard to the rules of society. It isn’t hard to distinguish which are good vigilantes and which ones are evil or is it? Rationally a

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    to the true Australia – not the Australia of the shams and the money-jugglers, but the Australia that sweats and suffers and fights…” (IronOutlaw, Clive Turnbull’s View On The Kelly Outbreak, 2016). Ned Kelly (1854-1880) was a notorious Australian outlaw. He murdered three policemen, robbed two banks and committed numerous other crimes. Regardless of his criminality, people claim Ned “Australia’s equivalent of Robin Hood.” (UpFromAustralia, 2016). Ned Kelly was a hero, a quintessential Australian

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    Outlaws Jamey Johnson and Justin Moore are the modern day outlaws of country music. Both musicians are well known in the music industry. They started around the same time and are still playing today. Not only do they sing and play guitar, they are both songwriters. Johnson and Moore are successful with their abilities, and the Country Music Awards demonstrate that with annual nominations. These men play a significant role on young musicians to keep pursuing their dreams. However, these two musicians

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    Ned Kelly Quotes

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    pluck and boasts, how game he would die” (Pg. 127, Wilkinson, 2002). Others, such as Ned Kelly’s mother (Ellen Kelly), felt very strongly that Ned Kelly was a hero and that police mistreatment towards him and his family was what drove him to become an outlaw. “Think what the police have done to me and mine, and then tell me if you wonder that the boys turned and smote the ones who had so persecuted them” (Pg. 128, Wilkinson, 2002) Others, such as Constable Richards of Euroa, feel that Ned Kelly did commit

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    Ned Kelly; victim, villain, hero Ned Kelly, an Australian outlaw, made his way into Australian history books, but for what? The notorious villain or a victim of law. Many of his actions made the public petrified at the sound of the name, yet others saw him as a beacon of light. Fighting for a fair police department. Although Ned and his gang shoot dead three innocent police men this does not make him a villain, neither a victim. Ned showed aspects of a hero, villain and victim throughout his life

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    Outlaw Archetype

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    The archetypes of the ruler and outlaw, deeply embedded in literature, folklore, and mythology, serve as polar representations of societal ideals, each embodying contrasting approaches towards justice and societal change. The ruler archetype praises a ruler that is fair and brings prosperity to all of their subjects; at times battling outlaws or foreign powers in order to protect their people. On the other hand, the outlaw archetype praises the person willing to stand up to oppressive rulers or groups

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    front against the outlaws. The document itself was probably printed onto large pieces of paper and displayed around the major cities like Sydney and Newcastle as well as the smaller,

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