I've continually said that, if you look at the evidence, the mob seems to mirror the general public. Most mob guys seem to be more or less middle class. And on either end you have a minority that are wealthy or are brokesters.Eddie mush wrote:I always wonder what kind of money these guys really make especially in smaller cities . I ready the book about Ron previte written by George A and he made it seem like in philly even the bosses were not taking it in . He talked about $10K here $20k there which is. More than I make but also a far cry from wat the bosses during the 70-80"S made
I look at it like this if a soldier makes 4K a week that sounds good lets then say he send up 1500 leaves himsf with 2500. That's a nice living but not really life changing money. Assuming his wife Dosent work he would be upper middle class but certainly not wealthy
Anyway, I agree that the situations and arrangements are going to vary too much to say there is any standard or rule set in stone.
That said, I always found this conversation between Salvatore Avellino and Richard DeLuca in the Jaguar interesting...
Avellino: "Before he was straightened out, he's telling me the union is his, you know? So, I'm saying, "What do you mean the union is yours?" He believes the fuckin' union is his. And what am I gonna say, union? Nothing is yours. Everything is the boss."
DeLuca: "Yeah."
Avellino: "Wait, and we, we only got the privilege of working it, or running it. Unless you got a legitimate thing, that you know, that it's yours, then they say, 'Well, that's yours'.' But anything that's got to do..."
DeLuca: "You operate at his pleasure."
Avellino: "You do what he wants. I mean, and even, even if, with a legitimate thing, you operate at his pleasure ninety percent of the time."