Apparently, your knowledge of gangsters emanates from movies and books. I don't want to rain heavily on your outlook, but rain I will. Through a friend - the son of a capo, but no gangster himself - I became acquainted with Carlos Marcello and Nick Civella (spelling of both surnames???), bosses of New Orleans and Kansas City respectively. While pleasant companions, especially Marcello with a most unusual accent, these men were thugs - poorly educated, rigid, authoritarian, manic-depressive THUGS who would have you [fill in the blank] on a whim. Contrary to the "Godfather" nonsense, they were not planners or deep thinkers. They controlled their employees, friends - everybody - via force or its threat. Not to be cynical, they operated as feudal lords, much like politicians and bureaucrats. Where politicians and bureaucrats control via patronage and extortion, so did these guys.Honda Enoch said:We all know of Al Capone, John Dillinger, Bonnie and Clyde, and the rest.
These people became legends in time in their own right.
So who is your favorite Golden Era Gangster(s) and why?
Silver Dollar said:Actually, I don't really consider gangsters too cool, just out and out dangerous. I might get caught in the crossfire. :eusa_doh:
However, if I have to choose a particular period, it would have to be the Depression era. It's a well known fact that John Dillinger and Bonnie and Clyde were not typical of a lot of gangsters. Yes they stole and killed and were dangerous folks but they didn't really prey on the average person. They preyed on the banks who the average Joe in the street believed that the banks were preying on them. They hated the banks because they were foreclosing on everything they owned and it wasn't nice business either. Today with all the foreclosures going on, some of the lenders are at least doing something to help people. Back then, forget about it. When the banks got hit it was sort of a popular revenge thing like Robin Hood. If you watch the hHistory Channel which I know a lot of you do, it will explain it better than I can.
Maj.Nick Danger said:...If I were to pick a favorite, it would be Dillinger. He wanted to avoid violence whenever possible, and probably would have if he could have avoided involvement with Baby Face Nelson, who was a psychopath.
Naphtali said:Apparently, your knowledge of gangsters emanates from movies and books. I don't want to rain heavily on your outlook, but rain I will. Through a friend - the son of a capo, but no gangster himself - I became acquainted with Carlos Marcello and Nick Civella (spelling of both surnames???), bosses of New Orleans and Kansas City respectively. While pleasant companions, especially Marcello with a most unusual accent, these men were thugs - poorly educated, rigid, authoritarian, manic-depressive THUGS who would have you [fill in the blank] on a whim. Contrary to the "Godfather" nonsense, they were not planners or deep thinkers. They controlled their employees, friends - everybody - via force or its threat. Not to be cynical, they operated as feudal lords, much like politicians and bureaucrats. Where politicians and bureaucrats control via patronage and extortion, so did these guys.
Like you, although I knew what they were, I was intrigued and flattered by their attention, even though I knew it was veneer, and they knew I knew.
What I've implied I'll just keyboard. This idea of "favorite" or nice-guy gangsters is fundamentally inaccurate. Don't think Robin Hood or the Corleones. Think Heinrich Himler at a dinner party.
That's my story, and I'm sticking to it.