In times of Tyranny and Injustice, when the law oppresses the people and the Nation is in Distress, the “Outlaw” takes his place in history.
The First Outlawed Am3ricans
The tale of the Outlawed Am3rican is one deeply rooted in our nation’s history. In the War for Independence, only three percent of the two-and-a-half million colonists stood to take up arms against the tyranny of the world’s most powerful empire and ruler, King George. This brave, rag-tag army of individuals firmly believed that God created all men to be free, laid down their lives in defense of it.
This was a time in history when signing your name became a revolutionary act. The fifty-six signers of the Declaration of Independence were brilliant but flawed men who, with “a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence,” boldly proclaimed the existence of a nation of free men with the authority to govern themselves, and became America’s Founding Fathers. Pledging their lives, fortunes, and sacred honor, they became the first Outlawed Am3ricans, risking everything to stand against tyranny, injustice, the idea that government grants rights.
The Outlawed Am3rican: The New Face of Patriotism
Merriam-Webster Dictionary defines the word Outlawed as 1a: a person excluded from the benefit or protection of the law b: to make illegal.
Scripture speaks of a time when good will be called evil and evil good, and evil is celebrated. When upholding your faith, protecting your children, and defending your rights can get you banned, fired, audited, censored, or arrested. The Outlawed Am3rican embodies this defiance of modern cultural narratives, becoming the symbolic figure of the Good Guys in the white hat, warriors of the Fatih who represent a beacon of hope, courage, and true patriotism that inspires and lifts the people up. Yet, they are Outlawed by the leftist-run media and the Marxist-inspired Democrat leaders who have been elected (by design) from all levels of local government, to the highest positions in our nation’s capital.
However, this story echoes the revolutionary spirit of America’s Founders, backed by an army of farmers, blacksmiths, teachers, and church leaders (aka the Black Robed Regiment) possessed the courage to take up arms in the War for Independence. Inspired by the belief that God endowed all men with inalienable rights, they signed the Declaration of Independence with “a firm reliance on the protection of Divine Providence,” pledging their lives, fortunes, and sacred honor.
Unknown to most Americans, the British feared more than just muskets and militias. They feared the pulpits of America, and for good reason. The preachers of the day didn’t just preach about liberty, they lived it. Cloaked in black robes, they stirred hearts to action and marched alongside their congregations into battle. The British named them the Black Robed Regiment, and they blamed them for the Revolution, and they were right to.
These weren’t soft-spoken chaplains content with staying silent. These were fire-breathing truth-tellers who understood what too many forget today:
Freedom doesn’t come from government, it comes from God.
And silence in the face of tyranny is siding with it.
These pastors stood shoulder to shoulder with the Founders—not just in prayer, but in battle. You don’t need a robe to join them. You just need their conviction.
And if they were willing to risk everything for truth, what excuse do we have now?
The Outlawed Am3rican stands with those cast aside for their convictions. We are: The truckers, bakers, bikers, and bankers driven out of their professions for resisting mandates and ideologies they don’t believe in.
The farmers are struggling under impossible regulations and restrictions. The stay-at-home moms were silenced by school boards for speaking up for their children. The workers forced to comply with “woke” agendas to keep their jobs. The small business owners were outpaced by corporations profiting from cheap, foreign labor. The tradesmen, teachers, and community leaders at odds with a system that erodes traditional values.
The first responders and servicemen were vilified for upholding their oaths to protect and serve.
The war fighters and America’s most elite special forces who were forced to retire for not taking an unproven vaccination, for a questionable virus that turned out to be a hoax.
These Am3ricans are united by a shared vision: the desire to preserve the Judeo-Christian values, personal freedoms, protect America from enemies foreign and domestic, and to help create opportunities that have made this country a beacon of hope.
It’s Not Rebellion—It’s Resolve
Stoking the Spirit of 1776, The Outlawed Am3rican movement isn’t just about resistance. It isn’t about lawlessness. It’s about lawful resistance to lawless leadership. It’s the torchbearers reigniting the spirit of 1776 and a return to the virtues that formed the bedrock of America’s founding. By sharing our history, we can instill pride in the hearts of fellow Americans and inspire them to carry forward the revolutionary spirit of the Founders.
The Outlawed Am3rican has been reborn to awaken the “extraordinary within the ordinary”. It exists to educate, inspire, and empower a new generation to embrace life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, not just as ideals, but as rights worth defending.
The Outlawed Am3rican is the heir of liberty. The modern-day “three percent,” a voice for the men and women who give a damn, and dare to stand, not in defiance of their government, but in defense of it. Together, they symbolize the hope of a brighter tomorrow for their children, grandchildren, and their nation.
Let it be known: the Outlawed Am3rican is not the villain but the hero. The guys in the white hat, standing, sometimes alone, for Truth, Justice, and the Judeo-Christian faith America was founded on.
This isn’t a history lesson, it’s a wake-up call.
-Outlaw Ed
The 56 men who became known as the “Founders” drafted and signed the Declaration of Independence committing to possible forfeiture of their lives, their fortunes, and their “Sacred Honor” to the cause of Liberty... It was their death warrant which established them as the “First Outlawed Am3ricans”.
The Merrium Webster Dictionary defines the word Outlawed as 1a: a person excluded from the benefit or protection of the law b: to make illegal.
The background image: Join or Die. In 1754, Benjamin Franklin published one of the most famous cartoons in history: the Join or Die woodcut. Franklin’s art carried significant importance at the time and is considered an early masterpiece of political messaging. Read the story here…
The Black Robed Regiment was a backhanded reference the British placed on the courageous and patriotic American clergy during the Founding Era.
It is strange for today’s generation to learn that the rights listed in the Declaration of Independence were nothing more than a listing of sermon topics that had been preached from the pulpit in the two decades leading up to the American Revolution, but such was the case.