Is it me (it probably is) or are there loads of made guys over the years who had Italian surnames but e.g. either their father's mother or their mother had non-Italian surnames.

I think that's pretty unfair on guys who have as much, or more, Italian blood but just happen to have a non-Italian surname.

Maybe I'm wrong on this but I definitely recall seeing a few maiden names for made guys that weren't Italian yet you barely see the Italian-Americans with non-Italian surnames get made, and when they do, i.e. Veasey (Sicilian mother), there is uproar all because of his surname.


I invoke my right under the 5th amendment of the United States constitution and decline to answer the question.