Podcasts about masseria

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  • 104EPISODES
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Best podcasts about masseria

Latest podcast episodes about masseria

Infamous America
LUCKY LUCIANO Ep. 2 | “Castellammarese War”

Infamous America

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2025 36:52


After Arnold Rothstein's murder, Charles Luciano works full time for a Sicilian gangster named Joe “the Boss” Masseria and quickly becomes Masseria's top lieutenant. Masseria begins to feud with a rival Sicilian, Salvatore Maranzano. By the start of the 1930s, the feud escalates into the mafia's bloodiest conflict yet, The Castellammarese War. As bodies pile up, Luciano decides he needs to take matters into his own hands. Join Black Barrel+ for ad-free episodes and bingeable seasons: blackbarrel.supportingcast.fm/join   Apple users join Black Barrel+ for ad-free episodes, bingeable seasons and bonus episodes. Click the Black Barrel+ banner on Apple to get started with a 3-day free trial.   On YouTube, subscribe to INFAMOUS+ for ad-free episodes and bingeable seasons: hit “Join” on the Legends YouTube homepage.   For more details, please visit www.blackbarrelmedia.com. Our social media pages are: @blackbarrelmedia on Facebook and Instagram, and @bbarrelmedia on Twitter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Ultim'ora
Prete (Unioncamere) "Ponte sullo stretto esigenza reale per il Paese"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 1:31


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - "Il Ponte sullo Stretto è ormai una esigenza reale per il nostro Paese. Abbiamo i lavori per l'Alta velocità fino a Reggio Calabria, in Sicilia abbiamo lavori tra Palermo, Catania e Messina, il ponte chiuderà questo cerchio. E' un'infrastruttura che porterà benessere, assolutamente necessaria". Lo ha detto Andrea Prete, presidente di Unioncamere, a margine della quinta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", a Saturnia.(ITALPRESS).xc3/abr/gsl

Ultim'ora
Andolina "In 20 anni Philip Morris investito in Europa più di 13 mld"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 1:45


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - "Philip Morris ha investito Italia negli ultimi anni, in Europa, per l'innovazione, la ricerca, la creazione di competenze, più di 13 miliardi di euro. Più di 3 sono stati investiti in Italia per creare una filiera integrata. Il ruolo dei grandi giocatori per l'economia è molto importante. Hanno un ruolo di traino per la filiera". A dirlo Massimo Andolina, presidente Europe Region Philip Morris International, a margine del Forum in Masseria, che si tiene alle Terme di Saturnia.xc3/abr/gsl

Ultim'ora
PNRR, Foti "Spesa è al 52%, bisogna accelerare"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 0:53


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - "Sulla spesa siamo al 52% di quanto abbiamo ricevuto, sicuramente va accelerata, ma non dimentichiamoci che è stata una situazione di programmazione forse più lunga del previsto e che solo oggi gli interventi iniziano adandare a terra". Lo ha detto Tommaso Foti, ministro per gli Affari europei, il Pnrr e le politiche di coesione, a margine della quinta edizione del Forum in Masseria."La messa a terra degli interventi necessariamente comporta che si trascini la spesa. La Commissione europea - ha aggiunto - ha un report in tempo reale su come sta andando la spesa e su come si stanno o meno raggiungendo gli obiettivi del Pnrr, penso che faràuna valutazione e mi auguro che non necessiti di istanze di parte".xc3/abr/gsl

Ultim'ora
Trump-Zelensky, Musumeci "Brutta vicenda, ora lavorare per unità Ue"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 1:20


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - Quella di ieri è stata una brutta vicenda, inedita, che non ha precedenti, ma come dice il presidente Meloni bisogna lavorare, già da ora, per mantenere l'unità dell'Europa per guardare a Kiev con tutta l'attenzione che merita, perché se passa il principio che quello che è accaduto è ordinarietà qualunque altro paese può trovarsi i carri armati nelle città. Al tempo stesso bisogna riaprire un dialogo con gli Usa che sia improntato a un rapporto di pari responsabilità e di collaborazione reciproca". Lo ha detto Nello Musumeci, ministro per la Protezione Civile e le Politiche del mare, a margine della quinta edizione del "Forum in masseria". "L'Europa arriva tardi a questo appuntamento" ha aggiunto "negli ultimi 30-40 anni non c'è stata una politica di sicurezza e difesa e oggi ne cogliamo i risultati negativi ma non è mai tardi per ricominciare". (ITALPRESS).xc3/abr/gsl

Ultim'ora
Trump-Zelensky, Musumeci "Brutta vicenda, ora lavorare per unità Ue"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 1:20


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - Quella di ieri è stata una brutta vicenda, inedita, che non ha precedenti, ma come dice il presidente Meloni bisogna lavorare, già da ora, per mantenere l'unità dell'Europa per guardare a Kiev con tutta l'attenzione che merita, perché se passa il principio che quello che è accaduto è ordinarietà qualunque altro paese può trovarsi i carri armati nelle città. Al tempo stesso bisogna riaprire un dialogo con gli Usa che sia improntato a un rapporto di pari responsabilità e di collaborazione reciproca". Lo ha detto Nello Musumeci, ministro per la Protezione Civile e le Politiche del mare, a margine della quinta edizione del "Forum in masseria". "L'Europa arriva tardi a questo appuntamento" ha aggiunto "negli ultimi 30-40 anni non c'è stata una politica di sicurezza e difesa e oggi ne cogliamo i risultati negativi ma non è mai tardi per ricominciare". (ITALPRESS).xc3/abr/gsl

Ultim'ora
Prete (Unioncamere) "Ponte sullo stretto esigenza reale per il Paese"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 1:31


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - "Il Ponte sullo Stretto è ormai una esigenza reale per il nostro Paese. Abbiamo i lavori per l'Alta velocità fino a Reggio Calabria, in Sicilia abbiamo lavori tra Palermo, Catania e Messina, il ponte chiuderà questo cerchio. E' un'infrastruttura che porterà benessere, assolutamente necessaria". Lo ha detto Andrea Prete, presidente di Unioncamere, a margine della quinta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", a Saturnia.(ITALPRESS).xc3/abr/gsl

Ultim'ora
Prete (Unioncamere) "Ponte sullo stretto esigenza reale per il Paese"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 1:31


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - "Il Ponte sullo Stretto è ormai una esigenza reale per il nostro Paese. Abbiamo i lavori per l'Alta velocità fino a Reggio Calabria, in Sicilia abbiamo lavori tra Palermo, Catania e Messina, il ponte chiuderà questo cerchio. E' un'infrastruttura che porterà benessere, assolutamente necessaria". Lo ha detto Andrea Prete, presidente di Unioncamere, a margine della quinta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", a Saturnia.(ITALPRESS).xc3/abr/gsl

Ultim'ora
Prete (Unioncamere) "Ponte sullo stretto esigenza reale per il Paese"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2025 1:31


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - "Il Ponte sullo Stretto è ormai una esigenza reale per il nostro Paese. Abbiamo i lavori per l'Alta velocità fino a Reggio Calabria, in Sicilia abbiamo lavori tra Palermo, Catania e Messina, il ponte chiuderà questo cerchio. E' un'infrastruttura che porterà benessere, assolutamente necessaria". Lo ha detto Andrea Prete, presidente di Unioncamere, a margine della quinta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", a Saturnia.(ITALPRESS).xc3/abr/gsl

Ultim'ora
Dazi, Lollobrigida "No a sistema tariffario aggiuntivo"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2025 2:42


SATURNIA (GROSSETO) (ITALPRESS) - "Sulla politica dei dazi non ci si può muovere singolarmente, è attribuita all'Unione, è necessario che ci si rapporti su quello che potrà avvenire con gli Stati Uniti in un quadro di mercato globale purtroppo con regole difformi anche sul sistema delle tariffe". Lo ha detto Francesco Lollobrigida, ministro dell'Agricoltura, della Sovranità Alimentare e delle Foreste, a margine della quinta edizione del "Forum in Masseria". "Ovviamente noi non guardiamo con favore il sistema tariffario aggiuntivo - ha aggiunto -. Esistono già dei dazi".xc3/sat/gtr

Diellecast
In "La Masseria" con Daniela

Diellecast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2025 43:43


In questa puntata, Lia ha deciso di punzecchiare un po' Daniela ripercorrendo insieme l'emozionante esperienza del lancio del libro "La Masseria". Un momento speciale, presentato nella prestigiosa presentazione al Senato Italiano il 16 ottobre 2024, dove Daniela ha avuto l'onore di introdurre l'opera. Lia, nel ruolo di panellista, ha arricchito la discussione, mentre alcuni talentuosi studenti dell'American University of Rome hanno dato vita a passaggi scelti del libro con le loro letture. Ma non ci fermiamo qui! Abbiamo colto l'occasione per parlare anche di libri. Ci auguriamo che questo episodio riesca a conquistarvi e a emozionarvi tanto quanto ha fatto con noi!  Ascoltateci e fateci sapere cosa ne pensate! Dani & Lia ~~~~~~ In this episode, we revisit the thrilling experience of the book presentation La Masseria. It was a special moment, held at the Italian Senate on October 16, 2024, where Daniela had the honor of introducing the work. Lia, serving as a panelist, enriched the discussion, while some talented students from the American University of Rome brought selected passages of the book to life with their readings. But that's not all! We also took the opportunity to talk about books.    

ArcheoTravelers il Podcast
Antichi rituali e crani: come i Neolitici di Masseria Candelaro onoravano gli antenati

ArcheoTravelers il Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2024 41:13


Nel nuovo episodio del Podcast di ArcheoTravelers, esploriamo i misteriosi rituali funerari dei Neolitici di Masseria Candelaro, un sito in Puglia che ha rivelato sorprendenti pratiche di cura e utilizzo dei crani.Scopri come questi crani, simbolo di potenza e connessione con gli antenati, venivano maneggiati, raccolti e utilizzati in rituali che duravano secoli.Un viaggio affascinante attraverso il tempo che ci porta a scoprire come le credenze sulla morte e sull'eredità culturale si intrecciavano con la vita quotidiana di queste antiche popolazioni.Un episodio imperdibile per chi vuole saperne di più sul Neolitico e sui suoi riti funerari.Buon ascolto!Trovi il progetto "ArcheoTravelers, viaggiatori nel passato" sui maggiori canali social tra cui Instagram e Facebook, oltre che sul sito internet ad esso dedicato www.archeotravelers.com.Qui trovi l'approfondimento all'episodio di oggi -> Antichi rituali e crani: come i Neolitici di Masseria Candelaro onoravano gli antenati

il posto delle parole
Veronica Ghizzi "Museo Virgilio"

il posto delle parole

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 18:51


Veronica Ghizzi"Museo Virgilio"MantovaA Mantova, il maestoso Palazzo del Podestà ha riaperto le porte dopo un intervento di restauro: noto fin dal Quattrocento come “Palazzo di Virgilio”, è diventato oggi in un moderno museo dedicato al grande poeta latino, figura centrale della tradizione letteraria e culturale italiana ed europea. Il Museo Virgilio, allestito all'interno del Palazzo, propone un viaggio immersivo nell'opera e nella leggenda del poeta, mettendo in dialogo la sua epoca con il nostro presente.Otto sale tematiche accompagnano il visitatore in un percorso scandito dalle tappe principali della vita e della scrittura virgiliana, dalle Bucoliche alle Georgiche, fino all'Eneide, come capitoli di un racconto che intreccia poesia, filosofia e storia. Il progetto di storytelling e design, realizzato dalla Scuola Holden, invita i visitatori a porsi una domanda fondamentale: chi era davvero Virgilio? Le risposte si svelano attraverso installazioni sonore, contenuti interattivi e approfondimenti digitali.Gli spazi che ospitano il museo sono, di per sé, monumentali reperti che sanno raccontarci, nelle loro tante stratificazioni, la storia di una città e di un'umanità che continua a evolvere. Palazzo del Podestà, fondato nel 1227, fa parte dei palazzi comunali, sede dell'amministrazione cittadina per 700 anni, fra il 1200 e il 1900. Fino al 1873 è stato anche Palazzo di Giustizia, e carcere fino al 1911, ma la sua funzione principale era appunto quella di ospitare il podestà, cioè il capo dell'amministrazione comunale, oltre a conservare gli archivi del comune. Chi visiterà il museo attraversandolo sala per sala, percorrendo l'Arengario sino alla Masseria, scoprirà un percorso labirintico e stratificato nel tempo. Il primo radicale rinnovamento percepibile delle strutture medievali risale al 1462, in seguito a un incendio che nel 1413 danneggiò gravemente la facciata su piazza delle Erbe, mentre la più recente delle riqualificazioni è iniziata nel 2012 con i lavori di consolidamento e ristrutturazione dell'edificio in seguito al sisma di quell'anno. Un evento tutt'altro che fortunato, che però ha condotto a un prezioso ritrovamento. In effetti, una scoperta preziosissima: affreschi medioevali che nessuno aveva mai potuto ammirare.Il percorso di visita del Museo Virgilio è strettamente connesso agli spazi che lo ospitano e riserva delle sorprese di inedita rilevanza artistica, come appunto le decorazioni affrescate ancora visibili nelle sale. Le più rilevanti e inedite sono nella Masseria superiore, nella sezione dedicata alle Georgiche, dove un soppalco di nuova costruzione porta alla giusta altezza e alla giusta distanza per apprezzarle al meglio. Il ciclo decorativo rinvenuto nel 2012 è certamente di altissima qualità pittorica e ricopre tre lati della Sala. Un'intera parete è dedicata al Ciclo dei mesi, la rappresentazione dello svolgimento dell'anno attraverso personificazioni o scene di lavoro correlate a ognuno dei dodici mesi con il relativo riferimento astrologico. Di forte impatto visivo, le immagini diventano un grande codice illustrato capace di suscitare l'interesse di un pubblico vasto, non necessariamente colto, proprio per il loro alto valore didascalico, cioè esplicativo e persino educativo.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarewww.ilpostodelleparole.itDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.

pordenonelegge.it - Festa del libro con gli autori
Antonia Arslan - I vent'anni della Masseria delle allodole

pordenonelegge.it - Festa del libro con gli autori

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 55:06


Incontro con Antonia Arslan. Presenta Gian Mario Villalta La masseria delle allodole è la casa, sulle colline dell'Anatolia, dove nel maggio 1915, all'inizio dello sterminio degli armeni da parte dei turchi, vengono trucidati i maschi della famiglia, adulti e bambini, e da dove comincia l'odissea delle donne, trascinate fino in Siria attraverso atroci marce forzate e campi di prigionia. A vent'anni dall'uscita del romanzo Antonia Arslan ci racconterà del suo impegno e della sua lotta perché questa tragedia non venga dimenticata. Edizione 2024 https://www.pordenonelegge.it/

Millevoci
La Masseria della solidarietà

Millevoci

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2024 27:56


Compie un anno la cittadella sociale nata nel quartiere luganese di Cornaredo gestita dalla Fondazione Francesco e sostenuta dal Rotary Club Lugano Lago: un bilancio, i punti critici e i progetti futuri.

Beyond The Horizon
Organized Crime: The Hit On Joe "Joe The Boss" Masseria (9/18/24)

Beyond The Horizon

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2024 11:11


Joe Masseria's rise and fall in the world of organized crime epitomizes the brutal power struggles that shaped the Mafia's evolution in America. Known as "Joe the Boss," Masseria ruled New York's underworld during Prohibition, amassing power through bootlegging and violence. His reign, however, was challenged by Salvatore Maranzano in the bloody Castellammarese War, a conflict that divided the Mafia into traditionalists and modernists. Betrayed by his ambitious protégé, Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Masseria was assassinated in 1931 at a Coney Island restaurant, signaling the end of the old Mafia order. Luciano, with a vision for a more streamlined and profitable organization, orchestrated the deaths of both Masseria and Maranzano, establishing The Commission to govern the Mafia and abolishing the title of "boss of all bosses." Masseria's murder marked the turning point that shifted the Mafia into a modern criminal empire, a legacy that continues to influence organized crime today.(commercial at 8:34)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

The Moscow Murders and More
Organized Crime: The Hit On Joe "Joe The Boss" Masseria (9/17/24)

The Moscow Murders and More

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2024 11:11


Joe Masseria's rise and fall in the world of organized crime epitomizes the brutal power struggles that shaped the Mafia's evolution in America. Known as "Joe the Boss," Masseria ruled New York's underworld during Prohibition, amassing power through bootlegging and violence. His reign, however, was challenged by Salvatore Maranzano in the bloody Castellammarese War, a conflict that divided the Mafia into traditionalists and modernists. Betrayed by his ambitious protégé, Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Masseria was assassinated in 1931 at a Coney Island restaurant, signaling the end of the old Mafia order. Luciano, with a vision for a more streamlined and profitable organization, orchestrated the deaths of both Masseria and Maranzano, establishing The Commission to govern the Mafia and abolishing the title of "boss of all bosses." Masseria's murder marked the turning point that shifted the Mafia into a modern criminal empire, a legacy that continues to influence organized crime today.(commercial at 8:34)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com

The Hidden 20%
ADHD, Time Blindness & "I Kissed a Girl" with Amy Spalding

The Hidden 20%

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 59:12


Amy Spalding, beloved for her humour and iconic boots, brought some much-needed femme-for-femme representation to BBC's hit reality show, I Kissed A Girl. Often referred to as the “people's lesbian princess”, it's fair to say she was a fan-favourite.In this episode, Ben explores why Amy was often told she was “too much.” Amy discusses her ADHD diagnosis, struggles with time-blindness, and journey to embracing her queer identity. She also shares her experiences in the Masseria and running her successful new jewellery brand through an ADHD lens.____________________ On "The Hidden 20%," host Ben Branson chats with neurodivergent [ADHD, Autism, Dyscalculia, Dyslexia, Dyspraxia, Tourette's etc.] creatives, entrepreneurs, and experts to see how great minds.. think differently. Host: Ben BransonProducer: Bella NealeVideo Editor: James ScrivenSocial Media Manager: Charlie YoungMusic: Jackson GreenbergBrought to you by charity The Hidden 20% #1203348___________ Follow & subscribe… Website: www.hidden20.orgInstagram / TikTok / Youtube / X: @Hidden20podcastBen Branson @seedlip_benAmy Spalding @amy_spaldingIf you'd like to support The Hidden 20%, you can buy a "green dot" badge at https://www.hidden20.org/thegreendot/p/badge. All proceeds go to the charity. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Ultim'ora
Decaro "I Fondi strutturali sono fondamentali per il Sud"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2024 1:07


MANDURIA (TARANTO) (ITALPRESS) - "In Europa porto sicuramente l'esperienza degli amministratori, anche degli amministratori pugliesi, cercherò di rappresentare il sud, con le esigenze del sud a partire dalla difesa dei fondi strutturali che per noi sono fondamentali, negli anni ci hanno permesso di crescere, anche a questa regione di aumentare il pil, l'occupazione". Lo ha detto il presidente dell'Anci, Antonio Decaro, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", organizzato a Manduria da Bruno Vespa e Comin & Partners. "Gli amministratori grazie a quelle risorse hanno visto crescere le condizioni economiche e sociali delle loro comunità", ha aggiunto. xc3/vbo

Ultim'ora
Decaro "I Fondi strutturali sono fondamentali per il Sud"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2024 1:07


MANDURIA (TARANTO) (ITALPRESS) - "In Europa porto sicuramente l'esperienza degli amministratori, anche degli amministratori pugliesi, cercherò di rappresentare il sud, con le esigenze del sud a partire dalla difesa dei fondi strutturali che per noi sono fondamentali, negli anni ci hanno permesso di crescere, anche a questa regione di aumentare il pil, l'occupazione". Lo ha detto il presidente dell'Anci, Antonio Decaro, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", organizzato a Manduria da Bruno Vespa e Comin & Partners. "Gli amministratori grazie a quelle risorse hanno visto crescere le condizioni economiche e sociali delle loro comunità", ha aggiunto. xc3/vbo

Ultim'ora
Sanità, Schillaci "Abbattere liste attesa anche aumentando personale"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 0:48


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Con il decreto legge sulle liste d'attesa non solo abbiamo affrontato il decreto sulle liste di attesa ma anche il problema degli organici e degli operatori perché è prevista da subito la possibilità per le Regioni che hanno la capacità economica di assumere più personale socio sanitario fino al 5% in più, e poi un cambio di passo vero dal 2025 con un calcolo nuovo del personale basato sui fabbisogni". Lo ha detto il ministro della Salute, Orazio Schillaci, a margine del "Forum in Masseria". "Non possiamo pensare di abbattere le liste di attesa non incrementando il numero di operatori all'interno del Ssn", ha aggiunto. xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Calderone "Mercato del lavoro in una fase positiva"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 1:06


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Il mercato del lavoro in questo momento ci consegna una situazione positiva perché abbiamo un aumento del numero degli occupati, un aumento dell'occupazione a tempo indeterminato, una conversione dei contratti a termine in tempo indeterminato. Questi sono i dati". Lo ha detto Marina Calderone, ministro del Lavoro, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", a Manduria.xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Lavoro, Prete "Disallineamento tra formazione ed esigenze imprese"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 1:33


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Gli occupati sono aumentati, ma c'è un doppio problema: la mancanza di competenze e il calo demografico. C'è un forte disallineamento tra i processi formativi e quello che le imprese cercano. La mancanza di personale ha causato alle imprese una perdita di Pil per 44 miliardi lo scorso anno". Lo dice Andrea Prete, presidente di Unioncamere, a margine del Forum in Masseria, a Manduria.xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Sanità, Schillaci "Abbattere liste attesa anche aumentando personale"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 0:48


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Con il decreto legge sulle liste d'attesa non solo abbiamo affrontato il decreto sulle liste di attesa ma anche il problema degli organici e degli operatori perché è prevista da subito la possibilità per le Regioni che hanno la capacità economica di assumere più personale socio sanitario fino al 5% in più, e poi un cambio di passo vero dal 2025 con un calcolo nuovo del personale basato sui fabbisogni". Lo ha detto il ministro della Salute, Orazio Schillaci, a margine del "Forum in Masseria". "Non possiamo pensare di abbattere le liste di attesa non incrementando il numero di operatori all'interno del Ssn", ha aggiunto. xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Confalone "Scienze della vita in salute, 50 mld produzione valore"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 1:24


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Quello delle scienze della vita è un settore in salute, produce ricchezza, che anche in Italia è in crescita, ha 50 miliardi di produzione di valore, e crea anche lavoro qualificato per le donne e per i giovani". Lo ha detto Valentino Confalone, amministratore delegato di Novartis Italia, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria"."La cattiva notizia è che dal punto di vista competitivo il settore sta perdendo colpi, rispetto soprattutto non solo agli Stati Uniti ma anche alla Cina. L'Europa ha perso quote di mercato. La buona notizia è che c'è grande attenzione da parte del governo italiano all'importanza del settore", ha proseguito.xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Emiliano "Patto coesione? Non è la Puglia che sta perdendo tempo"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 0:46


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Non è vero affatto che la Puglia e la Campania stanno perdendo tempo per firmare il patto per l'utilizzo del Fondo di Sviluppo e Coesione, semplicemente non ci è mai stata ancora sottoposta la bozza da firmare perchè il ministro Fitto ci chiede continuamente nuove precisazioni e naturalmente noi ci auguriamo che queste precisazioni ad un certo punto abbiamo termine e si possa procedere alla firma il prima possibile perchè in Puglia, per esempio, abbiamo 6 mila aziende in attesa di finanziamento che hanno bisogno che il patto sia firmato velocemente". Lo ha detto il presidente della Regione Puglia, Michele Emiliano, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", a Manduria.xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Emiliano "Patto coesione? Non è la Puglia che sta perdendo tempo"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 0:46


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Non è vero affatto che la Puglia e la Campania stanno perdendo tempo per firmare il patto per l'utilizzo del Fondo di Sviluppo e Coesione, semplicemente non ci è mai stata ancora sottoposta la bozza da firmare perchè il ministro Fitto ci chiede continuamente nuove precisazioni e naturalmente noi ci auguriamo che queste precisazioni ad un certo punto abbiamo termine e si possa procedere alla firma il prima possibile perchè in Puglia, per esempio, abbiamo 6 mila aziende in attesa di finanziamento che hanno bisogno che il patto sia firmato velocemente". Lo ha detto il presidente della Regione Puglia, Michele Emiliano, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", a Manduria.xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Di Silvestre "Nuovi dazi Ue sulle auto cinesi non daranno benefici"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 1:42


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Dal nostro punto di vista l'Europa deve puntare sui liberi scambi, sul libero commercio, noi come Bmw group siamo per il libero commercio a livello globale, quindi non vediamo una minaccia che arriva dall'importazione di auto cinesi in Europa". Lo ha detto Massimiliano Di Silvestre, presidente e amministratore Delegato BMW Italia, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria".xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Di Silvestre "Nuovi dazi Ue sulle auto cinesi non daranno benefici"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2024 1:42


MANDURIA (ITALPRESS) - "Dal nostro punto di vista l'Europa deve puntare sui liberi scambi, sul libero commercio, noi come Bmw group siamo per il libero commercio a livello globale, quindi non vediamo una minaccia che arriva dall'importazione di auto cinesi in Europa". Lo ha detto Massimiliano Di Silvestre, presidente e amministratore Delegato BMW Italia, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria".xc3/sat

Ultim'ora
Pnrr, Brancaccio "Bene quinta rata, ma preoccupano ritardi"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2024 1:15


MANDURIA (TARANTO) (ITALPRESS) - "Abbiamo anche noi salutato con favore e con piacere la quinta rata del Pnrr, però siamo preoccupati dei ritardi. Si è speso circa il 50% di quello ricevuto, anche se noi abbiamo un sistema di monitoraggio parallelo che ci dice che l'avanzamento è migliore di quello registrato da Regis". Lo ha detto Federica Brancaccio, presidente Ance, a margine della sesta edizione del "Forum in Masseria", a Manduria. xc3/sat/gtr

Ultim'ora
Energia, Pichetto "In un mix efficace serve anche il nucleare"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2024 1:21


ROMA (ITALPRESS) - "Al 2050 la domanda di energia è prevista più del doppio di quella attuale. Il nucleare è utile per un mix efficace con altre fonti, il Parlamento ha dato mandato al Governo di fare ricerca, credo che nel prossimo decennio saranno disponibili piccoli reattori". Lo dice il ministro dell'Ambiente e della Sicurezza Energetica, Gilberto Pichetto Fratin, a margine del Forum in Masseria, a Manduria.xc3/sat/gtr

Ultim'ora
Energia, Pichetto "In un mix efficace serve anche il nucleare"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2024 1:21


ROMA (ITALPRESS) - "Al 2050 la domanda di energia è prevista più del doppio di quella attuale. Il nucleare è utile per un mix efficace con altre fonti, il Parlamento ha dato mandato al Governo di fare ricerca, credo che nel prossimo decennio saranno disponibili piccoli reattori". Lo dice il ministro dell'Ambiente e della Sicurezza Energetica, Gilberto Pichetto Fratin, a margine del Forum in Masseria, a Manduria.xc3/sat/gtr

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane
9314 - Masseria Francescani lancia Fràn, il pop-up multi esperienziale dello chef Leonardo D'Ingeo

HORECA AUDIO NEWS - Le pillole quotidiane

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2024 3:46


Eretta tra il XVI e il XVIII secolo, abbandonata da anni, Masseria Francescani era ormai un rudere. Ma dopo un meticoloso restauro sotto la guida della Soprintendenza dei Beni Culturali, completato nel settembre 2020, è diventata un lussuoso hotel quattro stelle con nove camere dal design raffinato, circondato da un podere di 4 ettari con tanto di piscina elegante. L'ultima novità? Da quest'estate accoglie un'innovativa iniziativa culinaria: Fràn, il pop-up restaurant ideato dallo chef Leonardo D'Ingeo.

Live Laugh Love Lesbian
Episode 3 - Priya from I Kissed a girl spills the tea and chats about her experience on the show

Live Laugh Love Lesbian

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 53:45


Ahhh guys I still can't believe I got to interview Priya from I Kissed a girl! We chatted about the show, Priya spilled the tea and gave us some exclusive gossip straight from the Masseria. Don't forget to subscribe and download so you never miss an ep and remember if you want to submit a dilemma or question head to my socials @juliettefrancest click onto my link tree and submit to the google forms.lots of love, stay gay and thank you all so much for the support x 

Get Ur Willies Out!
S2 EP4 (Part 1): Amy Spalding (I Kissed A Girl)

Get Ur Willies Out!

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 36:36


Join Jakeybby as he's joined by our first special guest of Series 2, the Femme for Femme queen of BBC Three's I Kissed a Girl, Amy Spalding, as she spills all the behind the scenes tea from the Masseria. Listen now to find out what's really going on under the covers...This episode is sponsored by RIPPLE - nicotine-free-vapes. For 15% off, use discount code WILLIESOUT at https://www.therippleco.co.ukSend us your willies at williesoutpodcast.co.uk/williesAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

Ultim'ora
Schifani "La Masseria Verbumcaudo rappresenta la vittoria sulla mafia"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 1:10


PALERMO (ITALPRESS) - “Verbumcaudo? Sulla masseria abbiamo previsto, oggi sono stato lì, un finanziamento di più di 5 milioni per ulteriormente aumentare la produttività di questa cooperativa dove ho registrato con positività la condivisione, la coesione di tutti i sindaci della zona che si sono rimboccati le maniche, perché parliamo di un'immensità di terreno, si parla di 150 etteri sottratti alla mafia, una grande conquista". Così, in merito alla consegna dei lavori di riqualificazione della Masseria Verbumcaudo, bene confiscato alla mafia, in territorio di Polizzi Generosa, nel Palermitano, il presidente della Regione Siciliana, Renato Schifani, a margine del convegno "Zes unica, una grande opportunità per il Mezzogiorno?”, organizzato dalla Fondazione Magna Grecia alla Sirenetta di Mondello, a Palermo."Oggi ho ribadito come la doppia conquista è quella di restituire questi beni sottratti alla mafia a chi ha patito per questo - aggiunge -, cioè ai cittadini, ai giovani che attraverso questo possano trovare un lavoro per sé, per i figli: questa è la vittoria sulla mafia, la vera vittoria è questa, la mafia quando si colpisce nel vivo si colpisce nel patrimonio perché il mafioso mette nel conto l'arresto, a volte per certi tipi di fatti è quasi un premio, mentre colpirli nei patrimoni è un colpo che mette in grande difficoltà e in questo devo dire, in questi decenni i sequestri sono stati notevoli. Devo registrare anche un ottimo rapporto con l'Agenzia dei beni confiscati, col prefetto Corda che ha aderito ad alcune richieste alla Regione”. xd6/vbo/gtr

Ultim'ora
Schifani "La Masseria Verbumcaudo rappresenta la vittoria sulla mafia"

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 1:10


PALERMO (ITALPRESS) - “Verbumcaudo? Sulla masseria abbiamo previsto, oggi sono stato lì, un finanziamento di più di 5 milioni per ulteriormente aumentare la produttività di questa cooperativa dove ho registrato con positività la condivisione, la coesione di tutti i sindaci della zona che si sono rimboccati le maniche, perché parliamo di un'immensità di terreno, si parla di 150 etteri sottratti alla mafia, una grande conquista". Così, in merito alla consegna dei lavori di riqualificazione della Masseria Verbumcaudo, bene confiscato alla mafia, in territorio di Polizzi Generosa, nel Palermitano, il presidente della Regione Siciliana, Renato Schifani, a margine del convegno "Zes unica, una grande opportunità per il Mezzogiorno?”, organizzato dalla Fondazione Magna Grecia alla Sirenetta di Mondello, a Palermo."Oggi ho ribadito come la doppia conquista è quella di restituire questi beni sottratti alla mafia a chi ha patito per questo - aggiunge -, cioè ai cittadini, ai giovani che attraverso questo possano trovare un lavoro per sé, per i figli: questa è la vittoria sulla mafia, la vera vittoria è questa, la mafia quando si colpisce nel vivo si colpisce nel patrimonio perché il mafioso mette nel conto l'arresto, a volte per certi tipi di fatti è quasi un premio, mentre colpirli nei patrimoni è un colpo che mette in grande difficoltà e in questo devo dire, in questi decenni i sequestri sono stati notevoli. Devo registrare anche un ottimo rapporto con l'Agenzia dei beni confiscati, col prefetto Corda che ha aderito ad alcune richieste alla Regione”. xd6/vbo/gtr

Italia Mistero
Lucky Luciano (3° parte)

Italia Mistero

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2024 29:54


Lucky Luciano ha fatto fuori Joe the boss Masseria ed ora è il numero due di Salvatore Maranzano ilnuov capo dei capi. Ma la situazione è destinata a degenerare in breve tempo, Maranzano e Luciano vogliono uccidersi a vicenda; chi arriverà per primo? Vuoi approfondire? Vai alle seguenti playlist su Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLjklKhxhc2tnaY4lzwV0gfHcCAQ-0dIzu Oppure vai alla pagina di italiamistero.it: https://www.italiamistero.it/lucky-luciano/ #italiamistero #luckyluciano #mobster #mafia Italiamistero puntata www.italiamistero.it: https://www.italiamistero.it/

Stay In Good Company
S4. | E3. Masseria Potenti | Puglia, Italy | Space To Breathe And Laughter With Guests Are The Ingredients For Happiness With Chiara Tommasino And Her Family

Stay In Good Company

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 19, 2023 43:32


“For me it was important to have this beautiful example of generosity from my family, from people in Puglia. And even if they have nothing, they always want to share what they have. And of course they always want to know everything about you.” We're in great company with Chiara Tommasino, who alongside her brother, Walter and parents, Maria Grazia and Paolo, steward Masseria Potenti, a 16th century farmhouse set on a 320 acre estate amongst endless olive groves and vineyards on the Apulian coast. As a family living two lives between the North and South of Italy, the Tommasino's dreamt of returning to a sense of home where they could share laughter and love with their guests paired with refined hospitality, a strong agricultural identity, and the culinary traditions of their region. In this episode, Chiara eloquently tells how Masseria Potenti is the realization of this dream -  passionately made with life's sweetest ingredients - her family's recipe for “La Dolce Vita” that they share with guests from all around the world.  Top Takeaways [1:45] Chiara grew up with her time and her heart split between Puglia and Milan. As a multi-passionate herself, she shares the beauty of that life enjoying the best of the North and South of Italy. [4:30] Puglia is full of authenticity and tradition - from the agriculture to the cuisine, the habits of the people to the festivities throughout the year. [8:30] “I always thought we dream if we are missing something. If you need to believe in something and push towards that idea.” Chiara explains how Manduria called her family home. [12:30] There are a lot of lively conversations and expressive arguments around the Tommasino's family table when discussing how to run the masseria, but one thing is for certain…no one sits down until everyone is in agreement.  [20:30] A day in the life as a guest at Masseria Potenti starts with a bountiful breakfast of fresh fruit cakes, a morning enjoyed by the sea, lunch exploring the surrounding area, and upon returning home, an al fresco dinner sitting under their iconic fig tree.  [24:15] There are many ways to discover a hidden Apulia, connecting to its traditions and terroir - from courses in mediterranean cooking to wine, cheese and olive oil tasting, from a stroll in the countryside to a picturesque setting for a yoga retreat.  [31:20] Chiara is cooking up a retreat and residency program for those slow travelers looking to stay, to refresh, to make, to learn and to connect with the local community. Notable Mentions  La Scarcedde Pugliese - traditional Easter bread with egg in the center Maisai Potenti Monastero dell'Incoronata  Mandarinetto Liqueur - Pugliese digestif made of mandarin oranges  Mirto Liqueur - Pugliese digestif made of the berries of the myrtle plant  Visit For Yourself Masseria Potenti Website  Masseria Potenti Online Shop @masseriapotenti Stay In Good Company Website

The Big Tex Ordnance Podcast
Chris & Maz - Blue Force Gear

The Big Tex Ordnance Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2023 68:09 Transcription Available


On this episode of the BTO Podcast, we sit down with Chris and Maz from Blue Force Gear. Chris shares how his interest in guns started as a kid in Japan discovering airsoft, leading him to join the Army and spend his career in the 75th Ranger Regiment.Michael "Maz" Masseria talks about growing up around Special Forces, joining as an 18X, and serving as a Ranger sniper. They discuss how the tactical gear world has rapidly advanced thanks to innovations from the commercial market, not just the military.Chris and Maz also give a behind-the-scenes look at Blue Force Gear's operations and company culture. Chris explains how they are focused on their 20th anniversary at SHOT Show 2024 rather than new products. But they tease a few new items in development.The conversation covers various topics including civilian training, revolvers, knives, cold weather gear, etc. Please tune in to hear their entertaining stories and thoughts on the state of the tactical industry.This promotes our new weekly update on Youtube and the blog.

The Black Hand: An Organized Crime History Podcast

On Episode 46, We delve into the life of Carlo Gambino, former boss of the Gambino family for nearly 20 years,  he came up working for both the D'Aquila and Masseria mob organizations, before being made a capo in the Mangano family, following the creation of the 5 families, he continued to garner power, becoming Albert Anastasia's consigliere, then underboss, before Gambino took him out and began his 20 year run as head of the family that bears his name, I hope everyone enjoys today's episode and tunes back in next week for Episode 47Please give us a follow on our socials-Instagram and Twitter: @theblackhandpodSources:Background Music:Music: Dark Flashes by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.comIntro Music:Music: Void Glider by Shane Ivers - https://www.silvermansound.comIntro audio sources:Lufthansa clip belongs to The Fox Corporation“New York City is a warzone” clip belongs to CBS Broadcasting Inc.Joey Gallo and “Leave by violence” clip belongs to the American Broadcasting CompanySupport the show

Feinschmeckertouren – Der Reise- und Genusspodcast mit Betina Fischer und  Burkhard Siebert
323 - Im schattigen Olivenhain: Die Masseria Liberatore bei Mattinata

Feinschmeckertouren – Der Reise- und Genusspodcast mit Betina Fischer und Burkhard Siebert

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2023 19:45


Ein Steinwurf vom Strand an der Bucht von Mattinata, aber mitten im schattigen Olivenhain befindet sich die Masseria Liberatore. Das Bed & Breakfast hat auch ein schönes Restaurant mit einer kleinen Karte: Auf der 1. Seite findest du Antipasti, Primi, Secondi, auf der 2. Seiten die Auswahl an Pizzen. Feine Küche nach Hausfrauenart ohne viel Schnickschnack, aber super, frisch und authentisch! Wie uns hier die Troccoli, eine typische Nudelsorte der Region, und die hauchdünnen Pizzen aus dem Holzofen mit bestem Büffelmozzarella wie aus Kampanien geschmeckt haben, warum Burkhard von der Dorade und Betina vom Tiramisu begeistert war, hörst du ebenso wie unsere erste Aperitivo-Erfahrung mit einem Birra Moretti filtrata a freddo. Was der nur noch selten und nur noch in Teilen Süditaliens produzierte Weißwein aus der spannenden Rebsorte Falanghina mitbringt, das hörst du ab 11:26. Und warum du reife Orangen für´s Frühstück hier frei Haus bekommst, wann Betina ihre Cima di rapa-Empfehlungen weiterführt und welche badische Partnerstadt zum Gargano gehören könnte, hörst du nach dem Weingenuss

THE HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN MAFIA
FRANK COSTELLO 3° PART

THE HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN MAFIA

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2023 9:39


In 1931, after the deaths of Masseria and Maranzano, Lucky Luciano became the boss of what would become his own crime family. Vito Genovese became his deputy and Costello became his advisers, an important function within the Mafia clan. Costello was a prominent figure in the criminal underworld, earning large sums of money by becoming the head of the gambling industry. In 1936 Lucky Luciano was arrested for exploiting and aiding and abetting prostitution and sentenced to serve a prison sentence of at least thirty years. At first he tried to run his mafia family directly from prison. He later promoted his deputy Vito Genovese to the role of boss. In 1937 Vito Genovese was suspected of a murder and therefore was forced to return to Italy and take refuge in Naples. At that point Luciano named Costello as the new boss of his crime family.

So I Got to Thinking - The Sex and the City Podcast
How Dangerous is an Open Heart?

So I Got to Thinking - The Sex and the City Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2023 55:51


With special guest Gareth Valentino! Fresh from the MASSERIA, Juno and Dylan are joined by the I KISSED A BOY hunk to discuss the return of Big and hand-holding in THE DOMINO EFFECT. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Outlaws & Gunslingers
Castellammarese War

Outlaws & Gunslingers

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2023 27:27


The Castellammarese War was fought from February 1930 to April 1931 between the rival families of Joe Masseria and Salvatore Maranzano. After Maranzano's side wins, he established the infamous 5 families of New York and declares himself "capo di tutti capi" or boss of all bosses. However, doing so angers Lucky Luciano who takes Maranzano out and creates "The Commission'' and the Mafia begins to take shape how we know them today.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/show/outlaws-gunslingers/support.

The Running Wine Mom
The Sweet Life With Sally

The Running Wine Mom

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2023 74:19


In this episode, we sit down with Sally Gadea, the owner of Panna Gelateria in Yardley, PA, to discuss her journey as a pastry chef, business owner, and mom.Sally shares her experience of working as an executive pastry chef at The Hamilton in Washington D.C. and how her love for pastry and desserts inspired her to open her own gelato and bakery business. She talks about the challenges and rewards of running a business with her husband Jemil, who is also a successful chef.We learn about Sally's creative process when developing new gelato flavors and how she sources high-quality ingredients. As a mom of one daughter, Sally shares her tips on balancing work and family life, and the importance of self-care and fitness in her daily routine.In addition to being a successful business owner and mom, Sally's husband Jemil won on the popular cooking competition show, Chopped Sweets. She shares her excitement and pride for his accomplishment and how it has impacted their family and their business.Tune in to this episode of "The Running Wine Mom" for a sweet conversation with Sally Gadea, and to learn more about her journey as a pastry chef, business owner, and mom.Panna GelateriaChopped: Sweets EpisodeSocial Handles: @Pannayardley@therunningwinemom

Dark Windows Podcast
Joey Mazz gets whacked! - The hit on Joe Masseria

Dark Windows Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2022 61:25


Dark Windows Podcast Ep. 207: This week we are running back in time to the 1920's to New York and talking about some gangsters (if the title wasn't give away enough). This gets into some tribal warfare type shit with infighting and backstabbing. A true American Tale! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Midnight Train Podcast
The Most Dangerous Gangs; Part One of...

Midnight Train Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 132:56


Patreon... because you want to support our goofy asses www.patreon.com/accidentaldads  So thank you to a beautiful and wonderful listener, we decided to do an addendum to our top police stings and follow it up with the top most dangerous mobs/gangs of all time.  La Cosa Nostra One of the biggest threats to American civilization from organized crime is the Cosa Nostra, sometimes referred to as the "Mob" or the "Mafia," which sprang from the Sicilian Mafia. The term "La Cosa Nostra," used by the US government, and "Cosa Nostra" by its members literally translates to "this thing of ours" or "our thing." This international organization of criminals, made up of many "families," is committed to combating crime and defending its members. These organized and major racketeering activities are being carried out by these crime families or groups, which are connected by kinship or by conspiracy. A wide range of illicit activities, including as murder, extortion, drug trafficking, government corruption, gambling, infiltrating lawful enterprises, labor racketeering, loan sharking, prostitution, pornography, tax fraud schemes, and stock manipulation are also engaged in by them. The Cosa Nostra is most prevalent in the urban areas of New York City, New England, and portions of New Jersey, Philadelphia, Detroit, and Chicago. The Bonanno, Colombo, Gambino, Genovese, and Lucchese families are among the prominent ones in the New York City region. Sometimes, members and associates of one La Cosa Nostra family collaborate with members of other La Cosa Nostra families to carry out joint criminal activities.   Within these families, members collaborate on "crews" that are commanded by a "capo" or "captain," who is in charge of overseeing his crew's illicit actions and offering them assistance and safety. The crews are made up of trusted outsiders known as "associates" and "made" members known as "soldiers." An associate must be of Italian heritage, have proven their capacity to make money for the Family, and have shown a willingness to use violence in order to become a "made member" of the Family. The three highest-ranking members who manage the Family are the Boss or Acting Boss, the Underboss, and the Consigliere, or advisor. Cosa Nostra has its origins in Italian organized crime, although it has existed as a distinct organization for a long time. It still collaborates with many criminal organizations with Italian headquarters today in a variety of illicit operations.    Labor racketeering, in which it attempts to dominate, manage, and control a labor movement in order to have an impact on associated businesses and industries, is one of its main sources of income, power, and influence. Organized criminal organizations may profit greatly from labor unions, particularly their pension, welfare, and health funds. The mafia tries to regulate these schemes by giving businesses "sweetheart" contracts, cordial worker relations, and weak work regulations, or by manipulating union elections. Large cities like New York, Buffalo, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, and Philadelphia that have robust industrial bases and labor unions tend to be the epicenters of labor law infractions. Additionally, there are several organized criminal characters in these cities. Labor racketeering costs the American public millions of dollars annually through increased labor expenses that are ultimately passed on to consumers, according to many FBI investigations.   In order to investigate potential violations of labor law, the FBI collaborates closely with other governmental organizations and uses methods such as electronic surveillance, covert operations, use of secret sources, and victim interviews. The passing of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) in 1970 was the one event that helped more than anything else to deter organized crime. The agencies were able to work more effectively as a result of this action because they could target the entire corrupt organization rather than incarcerating individuals who might simply be replaced by other members or affiliates of organized crime.   The first known Sicilian Mafia member to immigrate to the United States was Giuseppe Esposito. After assassinating 11 rich landowners, the chancellor and vice chancellor of a Sicilian province, and six other Sicilians, he escaped to New York. In 1881, he was detained in New Orleans, Louisiana, and then sent back to Italy.    The nation's first significant Mafia event occurred in New Orleans. Police Superintendent David Hennessey of New Orleans was executed on October 15, 1890. Numerous Sicilians were detained, and 19 were ultimately charged with the crime. An acquittal spread allegations of widespread corruption and scared witnesses away. On March 14, 1891, a group of angry New Orleans residents formed a lynch mob and murdered 11 out of the 19 defendants. Eight managed to flee, nine were shot, and two were hanged.   As different gangs gained and lost power throughout the years, the American Mafia changed. The Black Hand gangs in the early 1900s, the Five Points Gang in New York City in the 1910s and 1920s, and Al Capone's Syndicate in Chicago in the 1920s were a few of the earliest.   The Italian Mafia factions started fighting during Prohibition for exclusive control of lucrative bootlegging networks. They struggled for dominance of bootlegging alongside Jewish and Irish ethnic gangs. By the conclusion of the decade, two Italian organizations were competing for dominance of the nation's criminal underworld. Joe Masseria, the head of the Genovese criminal family, oversaw one gang, while Salvatore Maranzano, who oversaw the Bonanno crime family, oversaw the other. The deadly Castellammarese War, which raged from February 1930 to April 15, 1931, was the result of the rivalry's escalation. When Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Masseria's senior soldier, and Salvatore Maranzano planned to have Masseria assassinated, the battle came to an end.   Maranzano eventually rose to prominence as the nation's most powerful Mafia leader, referring to himself as "Boss of Bosses." Maranzano designed the organization's code of conduct, set the conflict resolution processes, and split New York City into five families. Charles "Lucky" Luciano was designated as the leader of the Genovese family, as it eventually came to be known.   Maranzano's leadership position would, however, be transitory. Maranzano preferred to exclusively associate with Sicilians and upheld the traditions of the purported "Old World Mafia '' by refusing to cooperate with non-Italians. Younger Italian organized crime figures like Luciano believed that limiting their business dealings to Italians would restrict both the development of their individual careers and the possible expansion of their criminal empires. As long as there was money to be made, these men—known as the "Young Turks''—wanted to deal with Irish and Jewish gangsters.   Marazano quickly saw Luciano as a threat and gave the order to kill him. On September 10, 1931, Marazano was murdered by a group of mobsters at his office in the New York Central Building when Luciano learned about the scheme.   In order to prevent future Mafia battles, Lucky Luciano formed "The Commission," a coalition of five Mafia families of similar magnitude, with the aid of his lifelong buddy, Meyer Lansky. Vincent Mangano, Tommy Gagliano, Joseph Bonanno, and Joseph Profaci served as the commission's other leaders. After then, this panel made decisions about all organized criminal activity throughout the 1930s. The leaders of the Chicago Outfit and the Five Families of New York City reportedly still make up the Commission.   The organized crime groups quickly diversified into new businesses after Prohibition ended in 1933 because they were unable to maintain the high profits they had made throughout the 1920s. These new businesses included labor racketeering through the control of labor unions, construction, loan sharking, extortion, protection rackets, sanitation, transportation, prostitution, and drug trafficking.   In Las Vegas, Nevada's legal casinos by the 1950s, numerous Mafia leaders had made legitimate investments and were skimming money before it was recorded. It is assumed that the sum was in the hundreds of millions of dollars.   For years, the Mafia operated in secrecy with little opposition from the law because local law enforcement authorities lacked the tools or expertise necessary to successfully confront organized crime perpetrated by a covert organization they were unaware even existed.   It wasn't until 1951 that a U.S. Senate investigation concluded that this country was home to a "sinister criminal organization," subsequently known as La Cosa Nostra. Six years later, in the little upstate New York hamlet of Apalachin, The New York State Police discovered a gathering of important La Cosa Nostra officials from all across the nation. Numerous guests were taken into custody. The incident served as the impetus for altering how organized crime is combated by law enforcement.   Joe Valachi, the first Mafia member to turn state's evidence in 1963, divulged extensive details about the organization's inner workings and trade secrets. After then, the National Crime Syndicate of the Mafia was aggressively attacked by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Although the Mafia came under additional pressure as a result, its illegal operations were not significantly reduced.   However, the Nevada State Legislature's passage of a measure in 1969 that made it simpler for companies to run casinos caused the Mafia's power in the Las Vegas economy to start to decline. A year later, the RICO Act was approved by the US Congress, giving law enforcement extra power to go after the mafia for its criminal operations. By the start of the 1980s, the FBI had achieved success when it was able to free Las Vegas casinos from Mafia rule and made a concerted effort to weaken the Mafia's grip on labor unions.   23 mafia bosses from all throughout the country were found guilty of violating the RICO statute between 1981 and 1992. By 1990, almost 1000 members of criminal families had been found guilty. While many Mafia organizations around the nation were severely damaged, the most powerful families continued to control crime in their regions.   The Mafia has persisted in engaging in a wide range of illicit operations into the twenty-first century, including extortion, government corruption, gambling, infiltration into lawful firms, labor racketeering, loan sharking, and more. Today, Chicago and the Northeast still account for the majority of its operations.   La Cosa Nostra's organizational structure has not altered since the 1930s, and Cosa Nostra has operated for more than a century in a variety of guises.   Camorra Mafia   Now We talked about the American Mob, and we hear about them a lot, so let's talk about the True Italian Mafia, The Camorra.   Due to that gang's effect on American organized crime, the term "Mafia" has come to symbolize all forms of organized crime in popular culture. However, that phrase is really the name of the organized criminal gang rooted in Sicily, according to Mafia historian Umberto Santino's study of Mafia and Mafia-type groups in Italy. The 'Ndrangheta, from Calabria, the Sacra Corona Unita, from Apulia, and the Camorra, from Campania, the area that includes the city of Naples, are further "Mafia-type" groups.   The history of the Camorra is "particularly discontinuous," according to Santino. Despite having origins that may go as far back as 15th-century Spain, sources like Britannica claim that the organization first rose to prominence in the 19th century. Santino, however, claims that the organization's current form dates back to the late 1950s, when local criminal organizations in Campania started using the term "camorra." In the 1960s, these organizations expanded and became increasingly effective at smuggling cigarettes.   In this decade, they also forged advantageous relationships with a number of Neapolitan Mafia factions, which in the 1970s led to the development of profitable black market drug trafficking. However, there is one key distinction between the Cosa Nostra, sometimes known as the Mafia, and the Camorra. While the Mafia has a top-down, pyramidal structure of authority, the Camorra has a more dispersed system of small organizations, or "clans," that hold power. The Camorra has found success with its organizational structure, and as a result, is currently more powerful than the Sicilian Mafia.   According to Santino, the Camorra has 7,000 members spread throughout its 145 clans. The Camorra is the most prosperous and feared criminal gang in Italy thanks to its domination over the trafficking in narcotics including cocaine and heroin. The Independent published a story in 2006 about an Italian author named Roberto Saviano who wrote a book that revealed a few more details about the Camorra than the gang would have wanted. He had excellent reason to worry for his life. "This sprawling network of criminal gangs, according to [Saviano]," wrote reporter Peter Popham, "now dwarfs both the original Mafia of Sicily, the 'Ndrangheta and southern Italy's other organized gangs, in numbers, in economic power and in ruthless violence."   The New York Times reported that Saviano's book Gomorra was a "literary sensation" that sold more than 500,000 copies, but it also resulted in death threats and compelled him to go into hiding because it depicted gang violence, drug trafficking, child soldiers, and other aspects of the Camorra's business that the gang would prefer to keep hidden from the outside world. Aspects like the rampant government corruption, which causes trash to pile up in the streets car-high, or the fact that the Camorra has killed much more people recently than the Sicilian Mafia and made Campania one of the most deadly regions in Europe.   Sicily is where the Mafia that we know and admire today originated. They first appeared at some time in the late 19th century, and over the next 150 years or so, they expanded all over the world and became involved in just about everything. It has long been a mystery how this highly ordered system came to be, but new study from the University of Nottingham suggests that it all began with lemons.   Sicily discovered they had the ideal mixture to develop a lucrative crop in the late 1800s. Despite having the greatest concentration of lemon trees in all of Italy, they also faced a particular set of issues. Lemon farmers eventually turned to hiring their own private protection firms to protect their investment and themselves because of factors such as a wealthy upper class that exploited the peasant class to the fullest, a glaring lack of public law enforcement, and a government that really wasn't keeping the peace. Add a few more elements now: Sicily's location on a key Mediterranean trade route, the rapidly expanding citrus industry, and the demand for private security forces to safeguard interests make it the ideal location for the Mafia to establish itself.   Don Calo Vizzini was at the head of the Villalba Mafia during World War II, and he may have said it best. He was quoted by the University of Nottingham paper as saying, "In every society there has to be a category of people who straighten things out when situations get complicated. Usually they're functionaries of the state. Where the state is not present, or where it does not have sufficient force, this is done by private individuals."   The roots of the Camorra have speculated that it originated from a secret 12th century organization of assassins.   The Beati Paoli were a Sicilian group that originated in the 12th century; no one knows why they were given that name, although it's presumably religious in nature. The tale claims that they formed in response to the persecution of the aristocratic class, and the majority of what we know comes from Francesco Maria Emanuele, Marquis of Villabianca. They not only attracted each and everyone to their cause, but they also created a hierarchy akin to a royal court. From there, they set up security services, employed themselves as paid killers, and... well, secrets prevent us from knowing what else. Since they obviously had an underground hideout, we do know that it was accessible through the crypt of a Palermo church.   There are even reports that the Camorra had a lot to do with helping the allies sabotage Mussollini in World War 2. Much information was originally written up as German control and sabotage during this time but many years after, with arrests of many members, documents were found that showed that the Camorra and other factions helped screw over Ol' Mussollini.   Crips   The Crips were only a social group, as one Original Gangster (OG) put it, and by most accounts, he is right (Kontos 99, 2003). While there are numerous uneven areas throughout the turbulent history of the Crips, there are also recurring themes. However, unlike the violent, frequently fatal incidents connected with the Crips, which are frequently portrayed with dramatic exaggeration, the genuine components of the narrative do not make for riveting television. Many OGs and gang members have voiced their shock and disappointment at how the Crips have been portrayed, while still admitting the group's flaws and its final transition from activism to gangsterism. Debra Addie Smith, a close friend of the founder of the Crips, once expressed that she “was wondering when someone was gonna finally tell the real story about the Crips”.   The Black Panther movement was being dismantled by the police, who were making "mass arrests, incarcerations, and deaths of black teenagers by the police," which led to the formation of the Crips, a grassroots group mostly made up of African-Americans. The CRIPS (Community Resources for Independent People) emerged in South Central Los Angeles, California, in 1969 with a message of resistance and justice during a period of despair and pessimism within the black community, following the ultimate dissolution of the Black Panther movement. Raymond Washington, a "fearless and strong 5-foot-8 fireplug who liked to fight and detested guns," is credited with founding the gang. He finally distanced himself and was killed as the Crips started using guns and formed a feud with the Bloods.   Stanley Tookie Williams met Raymond Lee Washington in 1969, and the two decided to unite their local gang members from the west and east sides of South Central Los Angeles in order to battle neighboring street gangs. Most of the members were 17 years old. Williams however appears to discount the sometimes-cited founding date of 1969 in his memoir, Blue Rage, Black Redemption. In his memoir, Williams also refuted claims that the group was a spin-off of the Black Panther Party or formed for a community agenda, writing that it "depicted a fighting alliance against street gangs—nothing more, nothing less." Washington, who attended Fremont High School, was the leader of the East Side Crips, and Williams, who attended Washington High School, led the West Side Crips.   Williams recalled that a blue bandana was first worn by Crips founding member Buddha, as a part of his color-coordinated clothing of blue Levis, a blue shirt, and dark blue suspenders. A blue bandana was worn in tribute to Buddha after he was shot and killed on February 23, 1973. The color then became associated with Crips.   By 1978, there were 45 Crip gangs, called sets, in Los Angeles. They were heavily involved in the production of PCP, marijuana and amphetamines. On March 11, 1979, Williams, a member of the Westside Crips, was arrested for four murders and on August 9, 1979, Washington was gunned down. Washington had been against Crip infighting and after his death several Crip sets started fighting against each other. The Crips' leadership was dismantled, prompting a deadly gang war between the Rollin' 60 Neighborhood Crips and Eight Tray Gangster Crips that led nearby Crip sets to choose sides and align themselves with either the Neighborhood Crips or the Gangster Crips, waging large-scale war in South Central and other cities. The East Coast Crips (from East Los Angeles) and the Hoover Crips directly severed their alliance after Washington's death. By 1980, the Crips were in turmoil, warring with the Bloods and against each other. The gang's growth and influence increased significantly in the early 1980s when crack cocaine hit the streets and Crip sets began distributing the drug. Large profits induced many Crips to establish new markets in other cities and states. As a result, Crips membership grew steadily and the street gang was one of the nation's largest by the late 1980s. In 1999, there were at least 600 Crip sets with more than 30,000 members transporting drugs in the United States.   Funny side note: As of 2015, the Crips gang consists of between approximately 30,000 and 35,000 members and 800 sets, active in 221 cities and 41 U.S. states. The states with the highest estimated number of Crip sets are California, Texas, Oklahoma, and Missouri. Members typically consist of young African American men, but can be white, Hispanic, Asian, and Pacific Islander. The gang also began to establish a presence in Canada in the early 1990s; Crip sets are active in the Canadian cities of Montreal and Toronto.   Bloods   The Bloods gang was first established in Los Angeles as a defense against the Crips. The Pirus street gang, which was initially a group of the Crips, split out during an internal gang battle, united with other minor gangs to create the gang that would later become known as the Bloods, which is where the Bloods' origins and their rivalry with the Crips begin. At the time, there were three more Crips sets than Bloods sets. Despite this disparity in numbers, Bloods sets became more aggressive, especially towards rival Crips members, in an effort to demonstrate their dominance. Therefore, it is believed that the Pirus were the original Bloods founders. The gang's concentration changed to drug manufacture during the emergence of crack. The United Blood Nation, a gang that started out on Rikers Island, is frequently associated with blood sets on the East Coast.   The George Motchan Detention Center (GMDC), often known as C 73, is located on Rikers Island and is home to the United Blood Nation, also known as the Bloods. Problem offenders were separated from the rest of the jail facilities using GMDC. The Latin Kings were the most prominent and well-organized gang in the NYC jail system before this time. The majority-Hispanic Latin Kings were violently abusing White and occasionally African American prisoners. These African American prisoners created a defense organization they named the United Blood Nation after being organized by some of the most aggressive and charismatic prisoners. This prison group, United Blood Nation, was copying the Bloods street gangs in Los Angeles. Eight initial Blood sets were formed by many of the leaders of this freshly formed prison gang to recruit in their local communities around New York City.   By 1996, the Blood street gang had grown to include thousands of members and was becoming one of the most powerful gangs in existence. It also kept up a regular recruiting push. The Bloods were at this point less organized and more vicious than other gangs. Numerous slashings (attacks with a razor blade or knife) that were recorded during robberies were later determined to be Bloods initiations. The Bloods' signature ceremony was the Blood ritual. Bloods found recruits all throughout the East Coast.   In addition to members of other races and ethnicities, African Americans make up the majority of the Bloods. Early adolescence to mid-twenties is the average age of members, however some continue to retain leadership roles well into their late twenties and, on occasion, their thirties. Although there is no one person who can be identified as the Bloods' national leader, each individual Bloods set has a hierarchical leadership structure with distinct degrees of membership. Status within a gang is indicated by these membership levels. Each set is managed by a leader, who is often an older person with a longer criminal history. A fixed leader is not chosen; instead, he or she exerts themselves through creating and overseeing the gang's illicit businesses, using their reputation for brutality and violence as well as their own charisma to do so. The majority of the cast members are "soldiers," and they range in age from 16 to 22. Because of their readiness to use violence to win the respect of gang members and to deal with anybody who "disrespects" the set, soldiers have a strong feeling of dedication to their set and are very dangerous. Although they are not full members, "associates" participate in a variety of illegal acts and identify with the gang. If any women are involved in the gang, they are often associate members and are frequently employed by their male counterparts to carry guns, store narcotics, or engage in self-prostitution in order to support their group.   The surroundings of a recruit frequently affects recruitment. Bloods actively seek for school-age African Americans in particularly impoverished regions. Youth might find security and a sense of belonging by joining a gang. Economically deprived children who observe the trappings of gang life—gold jewelry, cash, pricey sportswear—can likewise experience instant satisfaction.   Based on how long a person has been a part of a certain set, blood sets have an informal hierarchy of levels.   The ranks are only a symbol of respect for individuals who have been a part of the set the longest and have survived the longest; they do not indicate leadership or domination over the set. Bloods of lesser ranks are not subject to those in positions of authority. Bloods of lesser status frequently refer to Bloods of higher rank as "Big Homies." They also call one another "relatives." Once a person joins a Blood set, they cannot quit the set or flip (move to another set) for the rest of their lives.   Members of the Bloods frequently refer to themselves as dawgs or ballers, HKs (an initialism for Hoover-Killer), CKs (an initialism for Crip-Killer), and MOBs (an initialism for Member of Bloods) (meaning drug dealers). Contrary to popular belief, Bloods & Crips are typically friendly amongst sets. Although it is against the law, bloods sometimes engage in civil war with one another. For example, the deuce 2x Crips and tray 3x Crips are at war, and they frequently work with Crip sets to eliminate their fellow blood competitors.   The many gang indicators used by Bloods members to distinguish themselves from other gangs include colors, attire, emblems, tattoos, jewelry, graffiti, language, and hand signals. Red is the gang's primary color. They like donning athletic attire, such as team coats that display their gang's colors. San Francisco 49ers, Miami Heat, Atlanta Hawks, Houston Rockets, Boston Red Sox, St. Louis Cardinals, Cincinnati Reds, Portland Trailblazers, Cleveland Indians, Philadelphia Phillies, Los Angeles Clippers, New Jersey Devils, Philadelphia 76ers, and Chicago Bulls are a few of their favorite clubs.   The most commonly used Bloods symbols include the number “5,” the five pointed star, and the five pointed crown. Despite common misconception Bloods are not a people nation (with the exception of a few) but they will however tie flags with the people for defense or mutually such as how the Crips & BGDs consider themselves cousins. These symbols may be seen in the tattoos, jewelry, and clothing that gang members wear as well as in gang graffiti, which is used by the Bloods to mark their territory. Such graffiti can include gang names, nicknames, declaration of loyalty, threats against rival gangs, or a description of criminal acts in which the gang has been involved. Bloods graffiti might also include the word “Piru” which refers to the fact that the first known Bloods gang was formed by individuals from Piru Street in Compton, California. Yakuza   During the Tokugawa Shogunate (1603–1868), two distinct groups of outcasts gave rise to the yakuza. The tekiya were the first of such groups; they were nomadic peddlers who moved from village to village selling cheap things at fairs and markets. Many tekiya belonged to the burakumin social class, which was essentially underneath the four-tiered Japanese feudal social order and consisted of misfits or "non-humans."   The tekiya started forming close-knit gangs in the early 1700s under the direction of bosses and underbosses. The tekiya began to engage in customary organized crime operations including turf battles and protection rackets after being strengthened by fugitives from the upper classes. In keeping with a long-standing custom, tekiya frequently provided security for Shinto festivals and, in exchange for payment for protection, assigned stalls at the associated fairs.   Between 1735 and 1749, the shogun's government appointed oyabun, or officially recognized leaders, in an effort to quell gang conflicts among various tekiya factions and lessen the amount of fraud they engaged in. The oyabun was given the privilege of using a surname and carrying a sword, which was previously reserved for samurai. The term "oyabun," which refers to the bosses' roles as the leaders of their tekiya families, literally means "foster parent."   The bakuto, or gamblers, were the second social group that gave rise to the yakuza. During the Tokugawa era, gambling was outright prohibited and is still outlawed in Japan today. The bakuto hit the highways and preyed on gullible prey using hanafuda card games or dice games. They frequently adorned their bodies with vibrant tattoos, which gave rise to the practice of full-body tattooing among modern yakuza. The bakuto naturally expanded from their primary line of work as gamblers into lending shady business and other illicit pursuits.   Depending on how they make the majority of their money, certain yakuza groups may still refer to themselves as tekiya or bakuto. They still use the rites that were a component of the initiation ceremonies of the older organizations.   Yakuza gangs have seen a rise in prominence since the end of World War II following a decline during the conflict. More than 102,000 yakuza members in 2,500 different families were reported to be employed in Japan and overseas by the Japanese government in 2007. Despite the burakumin being officially exempt from discrimination since 1861, many gang members today are descended from that marginalized group. Others are ethnic Koreans, who are also subjected to a great deal of prejudice in Japanese society.   The distinctive characteristics of modern yakuza culture bear traces of the gangs' antecedents. For instance, a large number of yakuza have full-body tattoos that were applied with conventional bamboo or steel needles as opposed to sophisticated tattooing guns. Even the genitalia may be tattooed, which is a very unpleasant ritual. Although they typically wear long sleeves in public, the yakuza members frequently take their shirts off while playing cards with one other and show off their body art as a reference to the bakuto customs.   The practice of yubitsume, or cutting off the little finger's joint, is another aspect of yakuza culture. When a yakuza member disobeys or otherwise offends his boss, he will perform a yubitsume as an apology. The offender provides the boss with the top joint of his left pinkie finger, which he has amputated. Subsequent offenses result in the loss of other finger joints.   This practice dates back to the Tokugawa era; the gangster's sword grip is weakened by the loss of finger joints, theoretically making him more reliant on the group as a whole for defense. To blend in, many yakuza members wear prosthetic fingertips today.   The three biggest yakuza organizations currently in existence are the Sumiyoshi-kai, which started in Osaka and has about 20,000 members, the Yamaguchi-gumi, centered in Kobe, with 15,000 members, and the Inagawa-kai, located in Tokyo and Yokohama, with 20,000 members. The gangs engage in illegal activities such the trafficking of people and goods, the exportation of weapons, and the smuggling of illegal drugs. They do, however, also own a sizable amount of stock in well-established companies, and some of them are well-connected to the Japanese financial, banking, and real estate industries.   It's interesting to note that the Yamaguchi-gumi were the first to assist victims in the gang's hometown after the tragic Kobe earthquake of January 17, 1995. Similar to this, many yakuza organizations delivered truckloads of goods to the afflicted area following the earthquake and tsunami of 2011. The yakuza also has the strange benefit of suppressing small-time criminals. Because small-fry thieves don't intrude on yakuza turf, Kobe and Osaka, with their strong yakuza syndicates, are among the safest cities in an overall safe country.   The Japanese government has clamped down on the gangs in recent decades despite these unexpected social benefits of the yakuza. A strong new anti-racketeering law known as the Act for Prevention of Unlawful Activities by Criminal Gang Members was passed in March 1995. All of the listed businesses with ties to the yakuza were removed from the Osaka Securities Exchange in 2008. Yakuza bosses have been detained by authorities since 2009, and businesses that support the gangs have been closed down.   Even though the police are currently working very hard to quell yakuza activities in Japan, it appears improbable that the syndicates would completely vanish. After all, they have endured for more than 300 years and are intricately linked to many facets of Japanese society and culture.   Mara Salvatrucha(MS-13)   La Mara Salvatrucha, also referred to as MS-13, is a ruthless, inhumane street gang. As many as 40 states in the United States are now home to MS-13 members who commit murder, rape, maiming, and terror. Legendary tales exist of their heinous crimes.   No one contests the veracity of these statements. MS-13, like many street gangs, actually takes pride in its well-deserved image. The U.S. Department of Justice claims that the group's motto is "kill, rape, control."   If you believe President Donald Trump and others, America's broken immigration system is to blame for MS-13. The belief is that the United States will be a lot safer if it can stop MS-13 gang members from committing all of their mayhem, deport them, and stop them from crossing the border.   Unfortunately, things don't work that way.   "Attention to gangs is valid. About 13 percent of the homicides in this country are gang related. That's far more homicides than from mass shootings or terrorism," David Pyrooz, a sociologist at the University of Colorado who specializes in gangs and criminal networks, says. "But let's remember this. The maximum number of homicides associated with MS-13 in a given year — gang-related homicides — is about 2 percent of the total ... gang-related homicides in the United States. That is, I hate to use this language, but that is in many ways a drop in the bucket when it comes to gang activity."   "MS-13 is sort of the perfect boogeyman," Pyrooz says. "They are the moral panic; the connection to immigration, the connection to Latinos, and then the heinous violence, makes it so they can function as this evil boogeyman."   It's frequently forgotten in discussions of MS-13 that the organization didn't start out in Latin America and then storm the border to wreak havoc on the American way of life.   The gang was founded in the United States in the 1970s. El Salvadoran immigrants went to Los Angeles in an effort to escape a devastating civil conflict. There, they lived in areas of the city that were already under the influence of other gangs, used marijuana, and listened to heavy metal music. La Mara Salvatrucha was created when the newcomers came together to socialize and to defend themselves from other groups.   A brief explanation of the group name is as follows: In El Salvador, the word for "gang" is "mara." Here is an explanation of "Salvatrucha" and the subsequent 13 (again, from the DOJ):   Salvatrucha is a slang term for "alert," "watch out," or "cunning," and it combines the terms "Salva," which stands for "Salvadoran," and "trucha." The "13" stands for the 13th letter of the alphabet, or "M," signifying the group's ties to the Mexican Mafia, an organization that operates inside prisons.   Police started to crack down as the new gang confronted more established organizations in Los Angeles and linked up with other gangs (including the Mexican Mafia), deporting some members to El Salvador, where civil instability remained rife.   However, some of those MS-13 members returned to the United States in the 1980s, and others from El Salvador joined them. However, it seems unlikely that there was a premeditated influx of gang members from Latin America into the country.   "Criminal migration is real," according to "MS13 in the Americas: How the World's Most Notorious Gang Defies Logic, Resists Destruction," a report by The Center for Latin American & Latino Studies at American University in Washington D.C., and Insight Crime, a foundation that studies organized crime in Latin America and the Caribbean. "But this does not appear to be part of a master plan, nor is it coordinated from some central headquarters. Gang members appear to move in the same patterns as the rest of the population, and many of them move to escape the gang and the violence associated with it."   Currently, MS-13 claims to have 10,000 members in the United States and 30,000 members worldwide. Thus, it ranks among the largest gangs in the entire world. The group is the first and only street gang to be listed as a global criminal organization by the American government.   Despite its size, MS-13 does not have a particularly significant criminal presence in the United States when compared to the total number of gang members in the nation. The National Gang Intelligence Center estimates that there are 1.4 million gang members nationally, and MS-13 is just one of the 33,000 gangs that the FBI has identified.   "What's interesting about them, what makes them different from other groups — partly in response to what the president has been tweeting and talking about them" Pyrooz says, "we can't think of an example in recent history of a single group that has attracted such attention on a national level."   According to news reports and those who have investigated the MS-13 gang, its members engage in money laundering, prostitution, drug trafficking, racketeering, and other illicit activities. They are extremely brutal in how they do their street business. The group has been implicated in numerous violent assaults, kidnappings, rapes, and most infamously, some horrifying murders.   "Gang violence is far more lethal than what it was four or five decades ago," Pyrooz says.   From "MS-13 in the Americas": "Violence is a major part of the glue that binds the MS-13. It is part of every stage of an MS-13 member's life: Potential members commit violent acts to be considered for membership and ultimately to gain entry; they are then beaten into the gang in a ritual that has left more than one permanently scarred; they move up the gang ladder by 'putting in the work' and showing 'commitment,' euphemisms for committing violent acts in the name of the gang."   According to the Washington Post, up to 10 MS-13 members lured a guy into a park in Maryland in 2017 before stabbing him more than 100 times, beheading him, and chopping out his heart. In vengeance for her boyfriend's murder, an 18-year-old Virginia lady admitted to taking part in the killing of a 15-year-old girl. The 18-year-old killed the younger girl by stabbing her 13 times and recorded it to show MS-13 leaders.   "It's hard to say that the attention is not undue or not deserved," Pyrooz says. "But it's hard to be able to focus specifically on them without paying more attention to what the problem of gang activity is in the United States as a whole." The 25 Best Gang Movies of All Time - IMDb

united states america american new york family university california texas canada world new york city donald trump chicago europe los angeles washington las vegas japan san francisco canadian colorado ms blood italy washington dc philadelphia toronto german japanese new jersey italian spain youth detroit jewish irish african americans new orleans fbi world war ii maryland asian boss oklahoma tokyo missouri attention cleveland louisiana dangerous washington post buffalo act labor caribbean independent member gang new england nevada senate large status montreal legendary black panther criminals korean prevention commission latin america chicago bulls east coast rico investigation mafia similar los angeles clippers hispanic buddha world war mediterranean el salvador northeast boston red sox contrary lemon miami heat philadelphia phillies aspects latinos gangs organized nottingham american university naples prohibition compton houston rockets bosses numerous mob yakuza osaka atlanta hawks sicily salva us congress rollin marquis portland trail blazers cleveland indians palermo louis cardinals al capone bloods cincinnati reds colombo subsequent syndicate new jersey devils sicilian pacific islanders levis federal bureau pcp crips black panther party yokohama calabria gambino south central rikers island mobs gomorra young turks economically britannica salvadoran south central los angeles genovese campania cosa nostra shinto east los angeles ndrangheta yamaguchi bonanno black hand consigliere camorra roberto saviano lucky luciano tokugawa ms13 latin kings la cosa nostra saviano lucchese meyer lansky kontos chicago outfit american mafia hks washington high school piru rico act new york state police mexican mafia apulia racketeer influenced sicilian mafia el salvadoran underboss cks tokugawa shogunate charles lucky luciano masseria insight crime corrupt organizations act rico national crime syndicate bloods crips pirus umberto santino
Foodie and the Beast
Foodie and the Beast - July 10, 2022

Foodie and the Beast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2022 53:57


Hosted by David and Nycci Nellis. On today's show: • Arlington's Buena Vida Gastrolounge reopened a few months back after an extensive renovation directed by owner Ivan Iricanin, CEO of Street Guys Hospitality. Executive chef Jaime Pelayo and marketing manager Dmani Harrison-Porter join us with info about Buena Vida's Mexican homestyle tasting menu and – big surprise – their awesome tequila cocktails; • It opened in 2003. It closed in 2020, with lots of help from COVID. And now – drum roll , please –the Neighborhood Restaurant Group's Vermillion is back – and with a new executive chef, yet! He's Ben Pflaumer, late of Osteria Morini, Masseria, Officina and others you know and love. Ben's in to tell us about recasting the menu and overseeing a facelift of the space; • Reginald O. Mack – Chef ROM (pronounced “Rome”) to those who love him – is head chef, House of ROM. And he's the king of the Crack Bomb and the Messy Marvin. Say what? Hang tight – we'll explain; • Some people dream, others live their dreams. Chef Thomas Harvey has been a mainstay in the D.C. area, working in kitchens helmed by Frank Ruta and other James Beard Award-winning chefs in Washington and at some of Virginia's most popular restaurants. Now he's opened his own neighborhood restaurant in Falls Church. The name? Harvey's, of course!

Do You Know The Mob?
Joe "the Boss" Masseria

Do You Know The Mob?

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2022 13:30


Joe the Boss could be argued as the first boss of bosses. He ruled the New York City underworld and got greedy, which would ultimately lead to his death. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/samuel-bratton2/support