https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/ ... -residents
Maxi was right!!! They’re just lovable rogues!!!
Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
Moderator: Capos
Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
WHHAAT MUUUYDAAAAH???????
Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
As Italy struggles to pull its economy through the coronavirus crisis, the Mafia is gaining local support by distributing free food to poor families in quarantine who have run out of cash, authorities have warned.
In recent weeks, videos have surfaced of known Mafia gangs delivering essential goods to Italians hit hard by the coronavirus emergency across the poorest southern regions of Campania, Calabria, Sicily and Puglia, as tensions rise across the country.
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“For over a month, shops, cafés, restaurants and pubs have been closed,” Nicola Gratteri, antimafia investigator and head of the prosecutor’s office in Catanzaro, told the Guardian. “Millions of people work in the grey economy, which means that they haven’t received any income in more than a month and have no idea when they might return to work. The government is issuing so-called shopping vouchers to support people. If the state doesn’t step in soon to help these families, the mafia will provide its services, imposing their control over people’s lives.”
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The ramifications of the lockdown in Italy are affecting the estimated 3.3 million people in Italy who work off the books. Of those, more than 1 million live in the south, according to the most recent figures from CGIA Mestre, a Venice-based small business association. There have been reports of small shop owners being pressured to give food for free, while police are patrolling supermarkets in some areas to stop thefts. Videos of people in Sicily protesting against the government’s stalled response, or people beating their fists outside banks in Bari for a €50 (£44) loan are going viral and throwing fuel on the crisis; a fire the mafia is more than willing to stoke.
From the first signals of mounting social unrest, the Italian minister of the interior, Luciana Lamorgese, said ‘‘the mafia could take advantage of the rising poverty, swooping in to recruit people to its organisation’’. Or simply stepping in to distribute free food parcels of pasta, water, flour and milk.
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In recent days, the police in Naples have intensified their presence in the poorest quarters of the city, where men tied to the Camorra, the Neapolitan mafia, have organised home delivery of food parcels. Magistrates have already begun an investigation against a group of people who were questioned while distributing food to local residents.
In Palermo, according to La Repubblica, the brother of a Cosa Nostra boss allegedly distributed food to the poor in the Zen neighbourhood, an area with an established mafia presence. When the news broke, the man defended himself on Facebook, claiming that he was only doing charitable work and attacking the journalist who first reported the news.
“Mafias are not just criminal organisations,’’ Federico Varese, professor of criminology at the University of Oxford, said. “They are organisations that aspire to govern territories and markets. Commentators often focus on the financial aspect of mafias but they tend to forget that their strength comes from having a local base from which to operate.”
The question of distributing food parcels is a tactic as old as the mafia itself, where in the south of Italy bosses have customarily presented themselves to the people as benefactors and local power brokers, initially without asking for anything in return.
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“Mafia bosses consider their cities as their own fiefdom,” Gratteri said. “The bosses know very well that in order to govern, they need to take care of the people in their territory. And they do it by exploiting the situation to their advantage. In the people’s eyes, a boss who knocks on the door offering free food is a hero. And the boss knows that he can then count on the support of these families when necessary, when, for example, the mafia sponsors a politician for election who will further their criminal interests.”
Dozens of investigations in the south have led to the arrests of politicians who have aided and abetted the mafia, and who were elected with the support of local Mafiosi who forced citizens to vote for them in exchange for services, such as a simple food parcel.
Varese said: “These handouts by the mafias are not gifts. The mafia does not do anything out of its kind heart. They are favours that everyone will have to pay back in some form or another, by aiding and abetting a fugitive, holding a gun, dealing drugs and the like.”
“Consider what happened to El Chapo, the Mexican narco,” said Gratteri. “He trafficked tons of cocaine and commissioned the murder of hundreds of people but in his hometown he was known for his benevolence, because people said that he provided medicines to families or built roads. The same thing happens here.”
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This week, Itay’s antimafia prosecutor’s office said bosses would offer their virtually endless criminal capital to businesses in need, and then swallow them up. Then, they will use those businesses for money laundering profits from the criminal activities.
Varese said: “The mafias might be able to benefit in other ways from the current lockdown and especially from the future, when Italians will all be able to return to work, spend more money, and get the economy on its feet again. But surely the story exemplified by the handouts of food parcels in Palermo and Naples shows their true nature, and it tells why they are so dangerous.”
In recent weeks, videos have surfaced of known Mafia gangs delivering essential goods to Italians hit hard by the coronavirus emergency across the poorest southern regions of Campania, Calabria, Sicily and Puglia, as tensions rise across the country.
Advertisement
“For over a month, shops, cafés, restaurants and pubs have been closed,” Nicola Gratteri, antimafia investigator and head of the prosecutor’s office in Catanzaro, told the Guardian. “Millions of people work in the grey economy, which means that they haven’t received any income in more than a month and have no idea when they might return to work. The government is issuing so-called shopping vouchers to support people. If the state doesn’t step in soon to help these families, the mafia will provide its services, imposing their control over people’s lives.”
Coronavirus: the week explained - sign up for our email newsletter
Read more
The ramifications of the lockdown in Italy are affecting the estimated 3.3 million people in Italy who work off the books. Of those, more than 1 million live in the south, according to the most recent figures from CGIA Mestre, a Venice-based small business association. There have been reports of small shop owners being pressured to give food for free, while police are patrolling supermarkets in some areas to stop thefts. Videos of people in Sicily protesting against the government’s stalled response, or people beating their fists outside banks in Bari for a €50 (£44) loan are going viral and throwing fuel on the crisis; a fire the mafia is more than willing to stoke.
From the first signals of mounting social unrest, the Italian minister of the interior, Luciana Lamorgese, said ‘‘the mafia could take advantage of the rising poverty, swooping in to recruit people to its organisation’’. Or simply stepping in to distribute free food parcels of pasta, water, flour and milk.
Advertisement
In recent days, the police in Naples have intensified their presence in the poorest quarters of the city, where men tied to the Camorra, the Neapolitan mafia, have organised home delivery of food parcels. Magistrates have already begun an investigation against a group of people who were questioned while distributing food to local residents.
In Palermo, according to La Repubblica, the brother of a Cosa Nostra boss allegedly distributed food to the poor in the Zen neighbourhood, an area with an established mafia presence. When the news broke, the man defended himself on Facebook, claiming that he was only doing charitable work and attacking the journalist who first reported the news.
“Mafias are not just criminal organisations,’’ Federico Varese, professor of criminology at the University of Oxford, said. “They are organisations that aspire to govern territories and markets. Commentators often focus on the financial aspect of mafias but they tend to forget that their strength comes from having a local base from which to operate.”
The question of distributing food parcels is a tactic as old as the mafia itself, where in the south of Italy bosses have customarily presented themselves to the people as benefactors and local power brokers, initially without asking for anything in return.
Advertisement
“Mafia bosses consider their cities as their own fiefdom,” Gratteri said. “The bosses know very well that in order to govern, they need to take care of the people in their territory. And they do it by exploiting the situation to their advantage. In the people’s eyes, a boss who knocks on the door offering free food is a hero. And the boss knows that he can then count on the support of these families when necessary, when, for example, the mafia sponsors a politician for election who will further their criminal interests.”
Dozens of investigations in the south have led to the arrests of politicians who have aided and abetted the mafia, and who were elected with the support of local Mafiosi who forced citizens to vote for them in exchange for services, such as a simple food parcel.
Varese said: “These handouts by the mafias are not gifts. The mafia does not do anything out of its kind heart. They are favours that everyone will have to pay back in some form or another, by aiding and abetting a fugitive, holding a gun, dealing drugs and the like.”
“Consider what happened to El Chapo, the Mexican narco,” said Gratteri. “He trafficked tons of cocaine and commissioned the murder of hundreds of people but in his hometown he was known for his benevolence, because people said that he provided medicines to families or built roads. The same thing happens here.”
Advertisement
This week, Itay’s antimafia prosecutor’s office said bosses would offer their virtually endless criminal capital to businesses in need, and then swallow them up. Then, they will use those businesses for money laundering profits from the criminal activities.
Varese said: “The mafias might be able to benefit in other ways from the current lockdown and especially from the future, when Italians will all be able to return to work, spend more money, and get the economy on its feet again. But surely the story exemplified by the handouts of food parcels in Palermo and Naples shows their true nature, and it tells why they are so dangerous.”
WHHAAT MUUUYDAAAAH???????
Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
A cartel in Mexico was doing this recently as well.
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Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
Hey Al Capone opened soup kitchens during the Great Depression.
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Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
I spoke to relatives recently and I haven't heard of any food distributions, instead its been scams especially in Palermo. Fake vaccines, ventilators that are for shit. I'll ask about food distribution later next week.
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Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
it happens mostly in the most impoverished neighborhoods, housing projects etc.Chris Christie wrote: ↑Fri Apr 10, 2020 11:40 am I spoke to relatives recently and I haven't heard of any food distributions, instead its been scams especially in Palermo. Fake vaccines, ventilators that are for shit. I'll ask about food distribution later next week.
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Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
Pablo Escobar rebuilt an entire slum in Colombia, and improved the quality of life for the people that lived in those slums. Of course after he was killed, those slums rapidly went back to being shit holes.Pogo The Clown wrote: ↑Fri Apr 10, 2020 11:35 am Hey Al Capone opened soup kitchens during the Great Depression.![]()
Pogo
Shock and Awe is a highly effective strategy, not just for the military. In this case, you shock the community with fear of violence, but then you win them over with things the government is either unwilling or unable to provide. The mob in Italy, and their coronavirus charity work is no different.
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Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
Cusmano and what he did was painted unfairly. Also, he never said all the things La Repubblica stated as far as threats and name calling. Here's a statement from him:
"Mine was an act of generosity without ulterior motives because what we are experiencing, every help is indispensable and I and some (others) in the neighborhood with the Padre Pio Association have thought in our small way to help the less fortunate by donating basic necessities.
I don't understand why the mafia was associated with this beneficiary act. So, I have to think that charity is a crime. I hope my position is clarified, I am just a boy who loves his neighborhood, and in times of difficulty, I help others."
"Mine was an act of generosity without ulterior motives because what we are experiencing, every help is indispensable and I and some (others) in the neighborhood with the Padre Pio Association have thought in our small way to help the less fortunate by donating basic necessities.
I don't understand why the mafia was associated with this beneficiary act. So, I have to think that charity is a crime. I hope my position is clarified, I am just a boy who loves his neighborhood, and in times of difficulty, I help others."
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Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
What he said about the name calling:
"I did not offend anyone these offenses did not do it."
"I did not offend anyone these offenses did not do it."
Re: Mafia distributes food to Italy's struggling residents
Here are few additional interesting and funny stories for you from the old days....Pogo The Clown wrote: ↑Fri Apr 10, 2020 11:35 am Hey Al Capone opened soup kitchens during the Great Depression.![]()
Pogo
Remember Diamond Joe Esposito right? This guy constantly gave donations to the needy during holidays and during winter days. So story goes that no wedding, nor funeral, or street or church festival was complete without the presence of Esposito. On Christmas day not a single person in the hood was hungry, for in Esposito's famous Bella Napoli Café there were mountains of spaghetti and tons of hot bread which was all given for free. Some news reports from that time period say that some of Espositos men, including himself, were dressed as Santa Claus lol imagine guys like Ricca or Volpe dressed like that lol
Another interesting story is about Gus Alex's older brother Sam, an alleged hitman for the Outfit with a nickname such as "RIP". After fleeing Chicago during the mid 1930s, Sam owned a huge farm in Cassopolis, Michigan; and was highly regarded in the community and had a very good reputation.
Sam lived quietly with his wife and they had no children but there was no reason for them not to love the other children from around the neighbourhood. With the huge desire for one day to have their own, Sam and his wife have done wonderful things for the kids in the neighbourhood. For example at Christmas time the couple had a practice of leaving huge boxes of toys at the doorsteps, “anonymously”, and when there was snow, Sam had the practise of hitching a sled to his tractor and taking children for rides around the school field.
Do not be deceived, neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the kingdom of God - Corinthians 6:9-10