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The Italian Mafia And The Italian Mafia

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America is known as the land of opportunity. For some, that meant the opportunity to grab what they could with no fear of the law. In the early 1900s, the era of dizzying social change, anything seemed possible. With the right street smarts and gumption to pull any job off, many immigrants rushed to America to better their family’s lives. Members of each family would do whatever possible to make that household better, no matter the cost or consequence. This shifty attitude stemmed from many years of family loyalty, well, that was the case of many Italians from Sicily. This exuberant can-do spirit coursed through America’s immigrant-filled cities, industrial heartland, and freewheeling west, all fertile ground for empires to be built and money to be made. This was the birth of the mafia. There were four prominent mafias in the beginning years of America, and they were the Italian mafia, Russian mafia, Irish mafia, and the Jewish mafia. However, the focus of this paper will be solely based on the Italian mafia, and how family honor, respect, drugs, money, and running from the law created a fixation and aspiration on the American gangster image. When we think of the Italian Mafia, we think of mobsters such as Joe Gallo, Tommy Lucchese, Charles “Lucky” Luciano and Al Capone. These men left a legacy behind for the mafia to succeed, and history remembers their names. Yet these sensational depictions of these men can take us only so far. The true story of the Mafia reveals both

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