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Article: “No Politics? No Mafia!â€
#976368
08/03/19 10:33 AM
08/03/19 10:33 AM
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Joined: Jun 2011
Posts: 1,526
LuanKuci
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According to journalist Stefano Vaccara if no politician is indicted during Mafia takedowns, or any link to politics is uncovered, then it’s not Mafia at all but just mere organized crime. The article below (available in both English and Italian) commented on the 2016 East Coast Enterprise LCN case: “Mafiosi†Arrested in New York: But Where’s the Mafia?New York Times and tabloids continue to confuse mobsters with "mafiosi"https://www.lavocedinewyork.com/en/2016/08/14/mafiosi-arrested-new-york-where-mafia/Another article, about the recent Gambino-Inzerillo bust in Palermo and along the NY-NJ-Philly corridor, is available only in Italian but basically pushes the same argument. https://www.lavocedinewyork.com/new...tra-palermo-e-new-york-ma-tutta-mafia-e/At first I thought they were supposed to be satirical. The mental gymnastics these commentators do in order to undermine the threat Traditional Organized Crime currently poses on American society is off the roof. Their articles read like something written by a sleazy Mob attorney trying to get his mafioso clients off the hook. Using Mario Puzo’s “The Godfather†as an example of what the Mafia should be is cringe worthy. The author makes a reference to one failed extortion attempt by Tony Soprano as another indication that, after all, he was no mafioso at all. Too bad that he forgets to mention the dozens of times the DiMeo’s successfully meddled with politics and unions throughout the series. Back to real life: What happens if no collusion with politics is discovers when mobsters are arrested in Italy then? Should they not be considered members of the Mafia if the case against them it’s only about drugs, whores, bets, murder, etc... and there are no link to politics whatsoever? There are literally hundreds of Mafia arrests annually (in Italy and elsewhere) where no actual active links to the Political Machine are discovered. What about the recent ‘Ndrangheta bust in Ontario? No politician was among the arrested and none of the indictees is reported to be connected to a public official/office: does it mean that it’s not real ‘Ndrangheta? Does his argument apply only to America/Canada? Lastly, where was he when union members/politicians got busted along with wiseguys, in recent years? (Ex. Dominic Ali’s case in Bay Ridge.) What about when mobsters on trial receive letters from elected officials claiming they’re good-hearted neighborhood boys? (Ex. Brooklyn borough president Markowitz helping out Joseph Chirico.) The more I think about it the more it’s clear that this guy is a shill of the Italian-American bourgeois, which is hell bent to push the ethnic-suprematist idea that today’s Italian-Americans are the “Flawless Few†and thus incapable of doing ill. Or he’s just a Godfather fanboy (perhaps subconsciously) and thus has an overly romanticized idea of the Mafia.
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Re: Article: “No Politics? No Mafia!â€
[Re: LuanKuci]
#976410
08/04/19 10:01 AM
08/04/19 10:01 AM
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Joined: Jun 2011
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LuanKuci
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I disagree, he’s a know-it-all who thinks he’s better suited to label them than the FBI, Italy’s Anti-Mafia Police Force, Canada’s RMPC, Interpol, etc... Implying that they’re just like any other criminal subculture is incorrect since most of those we bring up on this blog (Albanians, Mexicans, Black Americans, etc...) lack the folklore, shared history and century-old rituals that make the Mafia. Matter of fact that’s the argument used by mafiosi in order to beat Mafia-association charges in Italy and elsewhere. The recent “Mafia Capitale†trial in Rome saw many being left off the hook (or receiving shorter sentences) because the judges didn’t see them being linked by a common criminal culture made of affiliation rituals and the like. They were deeply meddled with politics around Rome and elsewhere, but that’s not what the Mafia is exclusively about. At least according to the actual judges and laws. Not to mention that they are still the most influential in the greater NYC according to local law enforcement agencies: https://www.gq-magazine.co.uk/article/the-five-families?ampAllon Lifshitz is the perfectly coiffed deputy chief of the office’s criminal division. His colleague Kristin Mace is the gutsy chief of the Organized Crime And Gangs Section, tasked with prosecuting the mob.
Forget the Russian mafia, the Albanians, the Japanese Yakuza or Chinese Triads: the Italian-American mafia still rules the roost in New York. “It’s a significant presence and no less than in the past,†Mace told me. “I don’t think there’s any other organised crime group that has surpassed it in influence in New York City.â€
All five families exist and are thriving. Every time one boss is convicted, another steps in, they said.
So, even if I were to agree with Vaccara’s point, their influence must also be political, since we know that other criminal subcultures are undeniably wealthier than them (ex. Mexican cartels). Politics-wise they’re still relevant then. Meaning that he’s simply devoted to underplay them, for what ever reason.
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