Our Civil War produced enough bandits, but only Jesse James has seized the imagination in endless movies, books, and radio and television programs, almost all filled with myths and falsehoods far outweighing any truth. Although in letters to the Kansas City Times, with the help of admiring editorials by John Newman Edwards, who had been a Major in the Confederate Army and served under General Jo Shelby in his Iron Brigade, James liked to pose as an avenging Southern partisan, the simple truth about James was that he was a cold blooded killer, perhaps with the blood of as many as seventeen men on his hands, and a thief. Like most men who followed the hoot owl trail, he died young, murdered by a man no better than himself, However as said by the fictional editor of the fictional Shinbone Gazette in The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance: This is the West, Sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend.
Thieves often play robin hood. You can see that in all those that want to “do good” through government.
Lazy thieves go into Government.
Frank James had a much longer and more interesting life than his brother Jesse.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_James
Frank spent “a year in jail awaiting trial. Finally James was acquitted and went to Oklahoma to live with his mother. He never was in the penitentiary and never was convicted of any of the charges against him.” Lucky man.
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