>This respect from the local population contributed to a legitimization of the mafioso, who received the support of the population given that their crimes were justified when committed against delinquents who were even worse than he (Colajanni Reference Colajanni1900). For this reason, almost everybody became directly or indirectly involved with the mafia, either by taking part in mafia activities or by covering and protecting those who committed such illegal acts (i.e., omerta').
Wow, so they lived long enough to see themselves become the bad guy? Weird to think the mafia started out as individual Batman like figures. I guess when life gives you lemons, form a cartel.
>Wow, so they lived long enough to see themselves become the bad guy?
As always, money and power corrupts. If you can get away doing bad stuff to bad people, what's stopping you from getting away from doing bad stuff to everyone to increase your RoI.
Similarly, the Chinese (and Chinese-American) Tongs started out as helpful organizations that did things like look after the widows and children of deceased members and protect Chinese immigrants in America from racist gangs, but as they got more powerful they too began to become criminal organizations.
Your missing one crucial element, the cold light of day, in other words exposure for all to see, much like what the media do when looking at their activities and role within society.
Of course, that doesn't draw any attention to their pre-emptive spying activities or the fact they seem unable to give up their sources and disrespect for privacy or thorough investigation.
This is true throughout south Italy. The mafia guarded the population against the parade of monarchies which ruled over the region for hundreds (thousands) of years.
The average person has no idea how hard life was back then. I think something like 50% of a ships sailors would die from scurvy on long distance voyages. East Indian Company's ships could lose 70%. And a lot of these dudes were getting kidnapped and forced into service by press gangs (Naval ships). The market for lemons was life and death...Every day I thank God that I'm alive in the 21st century.
Saw an episode of the show "Finding Your Roots", exploring the ancestry of the guests.
One of the guests was of Italian descent and one of his ancestors moved from Sicily to Louisiana in the late 19th Century. Many of those Italians worked as laborers on the sugar plantations.
So, as Henry Louis Gates, Jr., the host, said, Sicily was so poor that working on a Louisiana sugar plantation was better.
I learned about the plight of Sicilian immigrants in New Orleans at that time from Annie Proulx's historical fiction book "Accordion Crimes". She was inspired in a large part by a lynching of Italian immigrants which was depicted in the book https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1891_New_Orleans_lynchings
Yeah but then you hear about tribal societies, which didn't have access to modern medicine but they spent a lot of time just sort of hanging out and having sex and the only other thing they did was walk long distances and hunt and pick berries and shit. THAT doesn't sound terrible at all.
Hunting sounds fun to us because we’re like fat domestic cats. Do some hunting, then go back to your supermarket dinner. Maybe eat what you caught as a special treat, if it’s nice.
Subsistence hunting is more like didn’t catch anything today? Guess we starve until next time. oopsies. Hope you don’t get too hungry and weak to perform at your next hunt. Fingers crossed.
It's been a while since I had an anthropology class. If I remember correctly, it's really tied to how harsh the environment was. So natives in Alaska had to hunt or starve. For equatorial people, the stakes were much lower. There was an abundance of alternatives.
One way to look at it, how much art did they produce? Lots of art? Food was probably pretty easy to come by. Scratch a line on a log? Those folks worked _hard_ to survive.
I'm sure there were lean times for everybody. I'm not trying to say you or parent poster are wrong, I'm saying it's a big world, and all of those things and more were true for somebody, somewhere.
> One way to look at it, how much art did they produce? Lots of art? Food was probably pretty easy to come by. Scratch a line on a log? Those folks worked _hard_ to survive.
That's really only applicable to desert civilizations and those in colder environments where decomposition is arrested, which were unfortunately the harsher environments. Humans in the tropics are more likely to use wood and other organic materials to produce art, which don't survive for very long.
The oldest wooden art is only 9,500 years old [1] whereas the oldest stone tools are over 3 million years old [2]. The oldest wooden tools, on the other hand, are hundreds of thousands of years old for spears and tens of thousands of years old for axe handles.
I can't give a source but a figure I heard was 30% to 90% of males died prematurely in preindustrial[1] cultures due to violence.
Can't remember the source, sorry.
[1] My word, afraid I can't recall the right/more precise one.
(Edit: I went looking for the source for this figure, tried Google, plugged in the text "30% to 90% of males died prematurely violence preindustrial" and the very first result was this exact comment! After less than 9 minutes! Although strangely, Google reports it as being 13 hours ago? All very odd).
One of the operative activities there, hunting, seems quite stressful. Not sure that a return to said tradition would feel like a step forward for a lot of folks.
This being an economics paper, the title alludes to a very famous paper by Akerlof that everyone has read called The Market for Lemons, ostensibly about used cars but illuminating a broad principle of how markets can malfunction.
If we want to go even backwards, the sudden demand for citrus fruit in Sicily was due to the high incidence of scurvy in long-distance sea expedition in the 1800s, that were in turn facilitated by new methods of measuring longitude, first of all the invention of the chronometer, a watch (portable, small) with clock (precise) characteristics that was the great disruptive invention of its age. In the end, we can say that mafia originated from the desire of knowing what time is exactly in the borough of Greenwich, London, when you are in the middle of the Atlantic.
I watched a travel show about Sicily and it mentioned how the residents rented and worked in fields owned by absentee land owners. People were fed up paying rent with no hope of owning the land owned by someone who didn't even live on the island.
Here in Canada one of the reasons my island province is a province of Canada is because it joined Canada for exactly the same reasons Sicily had with absentee landowners. We're the Sicily of Canada I guess.
I'm not from Canada, and I don't really know what province you are talking about (my guess is Newfoundland). But aside from the analogy that it's an island, is there anything deeper in what you are trying to say? Is the organized crime a problem in your province?
No unusual crime perhaps we have the least crime of anywhere in Canada or even all of the Americas. We're PEI not Newfoundland although to be correct its name is Newfoundland and Labrador now.
I meant it's the island way of life and absentee landlords issue and how it spurred great changes for PEI and Sicily.
Article mentions the climate and growing conditions for citrus are specific so there were few locations where citrus was produced that were integrated to world trade; mild temperatures above freezing, irrigation, and rich soil.
The article mentions large lemon exports from Sicily all the way to New York; and California wasn't a united state or developed market producer of fruit at this time.
In general, Sicily has a very tight economic and cultural bound with oranges and lemons. Citrus fruit are extremely difficult to grow where winter gets cold (that's why the richest in Europe had enormous rooms in which you moved whole trees during winter, called orangeries [0]) and Sicily was the lead world producer of oranges in a time when it was impossible to grow them systematically anywhere else. If you're Italian, the correlation Sicily - oranges is almost automatic.
Wow, so they lived long enough to see themselves become the bad guy? Weird to think the mafia started out as individual Batman like figures. I guess when life gives you lemons, form a cartel.