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What are some personal feelings as to what globalism is? How does it affect us?

I'll address the world trade part of it, which is most of it it seems. Money.In theory, it had some good sounding points. It was supposed to expand our exposure to products etc., and did, for a while. But now?One world one dollar. Little to no competition. If you're a walking clone, like most head down thumb communicators today, you're too commercially drugged to care.Americans were the last and best originators. Free society, big country, melting pot, and a history of renegade immigrants seeking their freedom and fortune. Our society was not organized, unlike Asian culture in which the individual would much rather blend in than stand out. (Too risky) They lived to hone ‘alikeness’ to perfection. Miniaturization, efficiency. Overcrowded one minded societies do that.America however, in her vast distances…freedom…diversity in the land, the people, the climate, screamed independence of thought, innovation, creation. Would world trade do something for us or to us? Both and, in my opinion, it wasn't worth the price.The golden years of vehicle ownership produced economic affordability but also works of art. We imported some stuff, but we needed nothing. America was self sustaining, and exporting our overage. We were feeding the world. We were a manufacturing dynasty, a working nation. Again, we needed nothing. We were the go to country.Enter World trade, which immediately became Global production. Child labor sweat factories legal or ignored in China, India, all over Asia, suddenly competed with the adult labor, worker safe USA factories. And even our own American big business moved production to those countries. Next, crops unmonitored or pretend monitored during growth beat our farming prices into the ground. Our growing standards cost money too. So it became cheaper for Campbell, Green Giant, Kroger etc., to buy foreign.And finally, the last nail in the coffin. EXCLUSIVE ,,, monopoly deals on products to China. That's world trade? Try to find American made …yes even GE American made lightbulbs. That item is needed in every home, can't be mass produced here. A deal was cut. Nor can the USA manufacture solar panels here. Even American owned companies cannot make them here.A global economy where even those helicopter moms who ban ‘everything’ buy that 99c Colgate/Crest/Ultrabrite etc. crap toothpaste made in a ‘locally health monitored’ Chinese factory. Dirt in the mix? Add more bleach.Cheap dog food appeal to you? Dogs dying from plastic food filler…but we got used to it! Because there were zero major American dog food companies that hadn't been using those Chinese fillers. We still have a hard time finding any all US made food. Purina, Iams, Pedigree, Eukanuba, Science Diet, all sold out for cheaper Chinese food products. Oh well, it's just our kids and dogs, right?We are now a conditioned robotic society of global consumers. Our trends, are dictated now, not chosen. Product ‘improvements’ called streamlining really mean cutting… the cost and quality. Statitistics and efficiency have replaced preferences. Facts can always be spun. I image the best jobs today, go to the best spinners.We are literally measured behaviorally to see where we draw the line, balk, at being pushed too far …to lower our standards yet one more time. But is that when the manufacturer stops pushing? No. It's seen as a temporary barrier. The spin doctors arrive. They fix the verbage. And the least experienced begin to follow. The younger generation. Not being exposed to a past of quality, long term ownership, unique products, they are sucked into a vortex of buy this now, pay later. The second the item is paid for its either outdated or flawed. Coincidence? Come on.America…. Look up what we invented, discovered. Look up what actual products are built here now. What happened? Where did this World Trade go? We used to eat the foods we bought at the grocery store because the came in fresh, ripening naturally, safe, delicious. Today we buy cheap foreign grown food and toss so much of it out. Saving money? No…tossing money into the garbage. Marginal taste, artificially gassed to hold color in the hold of a ship. Contaminated seafood, beef that is fed waste-contaminated crops.But, it's okay. The newer generations that don't remember, don't miss it.There is one oddity though. In my travels to Mexico, I've seen and purchased American pharm prescription drugs, from the same California mfg plant my Walgreens gets theirs, but instead of $139 dollars, it costs $35. And their German made generics cost 1/5 of our generics, prescription gotten without a script there. No narcotics, but valid drugs that work. Millions of lucky US citizens with passports and border access cross over and save thousands annually. It's even cheaper than buying Canadian drugs. But how come that World Trade pricing isn't available at the CVS on our side, just fifty yards north of the Mexican Pharms? I mean most drugs are invented here so why isn't that cost of research spread out a bit, like globally.Just sayin…and thanks for the rant time.

Who were the 5 most powerful mobsters or gangsters in recent American history?

In recent American history, only a few. Organised crime is more international these days.Semion Mogilevich: The grand don of world crime bosses has to be Mogilevich of Russia. His nicknames include “Brainy Don” and “Boss of Bosses.” Some observers see him more as the Russian Mob’s top banker rather than a boss. He has been on the FBI’s top 10 most wanted fugitives list since 2009, and the $100,000 reward for information leading to his arrest still stands. However, he is known to reside in Moscow, and Vladimir Putin’s Russia has no extradition treaty with the United States, so it’s impossible to apprehend him. Interpol also lists Mogilevich on its inventory of Europe’s most wanted organised crime figure. Born in the Ukraine in 1946, Mogilevich joined the old Soviet Union’s Lyubertskaya crime clan in the early 1970s. After his apprenticeship, he started his own syndicate, the Solntsdevo gang. Of Jewish heritage, and once in possession of an Israeli passport, Mogilevich stole millions of dollars from Jews seeking to leave Russia for refuge in Israel in the 1980s. He used the proceeds to invest in both criminal and legitimate enterprises. In the 1990s, in Canada, he created YBM Magnex International, a supposed magnet manufacturing company based outside Philadelphia. But he never visited Philadelphia, and defrauded investors out of $150 million. Mogilevich has an economics degree and is notoriously shrewd about manipulating money – and investors. According to the FBI’s official statement on him, YBM, a public company incorporated in Canada, saw its stock price rise some 2,000 percent due to bogus financial records Mogilevich created, bribes to accountants, and lies told to Securities and Exchange (Commission) officials. Authorities from multiple countries charge the “Brainy Don” with some 40 criminal offenses from racketeering to wire fraud, conspiracy, aiding and abetting, filing false documents with the SEC and money laundering. He’s also sought for questioning in alleged murder-for-hire schemes and dealing in drugs and firearms. Russian officials accused him in 1999 of using offshore companies to launder $500 million through the Bank of New York, but that was before the Putin era. In his native Ukraine, he’s suspected of taking part in a corrupt deal in 2005 with high-level politicians to import gas into the country from Russia and Central Asia. Yet he remains a free man in Russia, almost certainly thanks to protection from friends in high places.Shigeharu Shirai: Japan’s equivalent to the Mafia, the Yakuza, is currently in a state of decline since the late 1980s. With the younger generation less interested in joining, new anti-gang laws discouraging graft following an extremely violent gang war between 1985–89, and a waning of Japan’s historic tolerance of it, the group’s membership fell to just 39,000 in 2016 from about 63,000 four years earlier. The 103-year-old Yamaguchi-gumi gang, based in the city of Kobe, remains the leading crime clique of the Yakuza’s four families. The “gumi” family split up in 2015, creating a faction, the Kobe Yamaguchi-gumi. Then in 2017, another splinter group, named the Ninkyo Yamaguchi-gumi, came about after its leader, Kunio Inoue, clashed with “gumi” boss Kenichi Shinoda. The division did not seem to help the Kobe gang however. Later in 2017, two Kobe “gumi” members were arrested at a shopping mall while trying to steal $700 worth of groceries, including rice, a watermelon and an eel. One of the aging gangsters confessed to police that members must resort to shoplifting because “the group is so poor.” This from a transnational crime group said to earn billions a year from drug trafficking, prostitution, gambling and other rackets within its ranks. Who is the latest Yakuza boss? If that means the most infamous, it would have to be Shigeharu Shirai, a 74-year-old Yamaguchi-gumi leader, Shirai fled from Japan to Thailand in 2005 and remained a fugitive with an expired visa until his arrest in January 2019. Shirai’s very-Yakuza colorful gang tattoos gave him away, via social media of course. After the photos went viral, Japanese police notified Thai authorities that Shirai was a wanted suspect in a gangland slaying from 2003. Thai police arrested Shirai, who immediately denied the murder allegation. Officers released damning pictures of his hands, revealing another Yakuza pedigree – his left pinkie finger severed below the first knuckle, a common form of punishment for wrongdoing within the shadowy Yakuza.Matteo Messina Denaro: The Mafia and the seeds of modern organized crime as we know it in Italy started in the mid-19th century and its island base in Sicily. The Mafia remains there today, a virtually unbeatable even though a severely diminished foe for Italian law enforcement and society. But the standing of the Sicilian Mafia has been receding for quite some time, ever since the assassinations of two top anti-Mafia crusading magistrates, Giovanni Falcone and Paolo Borsellino, in separate terrorist bombings back in 1992 as part of its campaign against the Italian Government. Similar to the public outcry in America from the 1929 St. Valentine’s Day Massacre in Chicago, where Mob gunmen slaughtered seven men inside a garage with the aid of corrupt police officers and Irish defectors, the 1992 killings of Falcone and Borsellino in Sicily inspired a nationwide crusade against organised crime. Anti-Mafia reform laws passed in Italy since then have prompted many raids by military and state police and hundreds of arrests. One Mafiosi, captured in 1993, was the vicious “boss of bosses” in Palermo, Salvatore “Toto” Riina. The courts imposed 26 life terms on Riina for directing the 1992 killings of Falcone and Borsellino and his guilt in more than 100 murders as a Mafia boss. The Sicilian-born Riina died in an Italian prison in November 2017, a day after his 87th birthday. Some Mafiosi in Palermo have lately joined with a Nigerian migrant gang, the Vikings. The gang forces female Nigerian migrants into prostitution to pay off large debts they incur to emigrate. The Mafia is also attempting a comeback by expanding beyond public works fraud and extorting “pizzo” fees from small businesses to trading in illegal hashish imported from northern Africa. Meanwhile, the ’Ndrangheta of Calabria currently reigns not only as Europe’s major trafficker in cocaine, but as Italy’s most influential organised crime syndicate, ahead of the Sicilian Mafia, the Camorra of Naples and Sacra Corona Unita of Bari. In Germany, the ’Ndrangheta operates hotels and bars and uses the European port cities of Rotterdam and Antwerp to smuggle in the South American-made cocaine it traffics there. Nevertheless, the ’Ndrangheta’s leadership, some of whom have been in hiding for many years, have suffered major setbacks at the hands of police. In June 2017, officers of the Italian Carabinieri military entered a home in a small village in Calabria and found drug boss Giuseppi “U Capra” Giorgi. The boss quietly concealed himself for several hours behind his fireplace until officers heard him move. It was a long time coming. Police had searched for the 56-year-old Giorgi for 23 years, since a judge sentenced him to 28 years in prison for drug trafficking in 1994. Police also believe he dealt in firearms and unlawfully disposed of hazardous waste by sinking a loaded ship off the coast of Italy. Today, Italy’s biggest Mob boss arguably could be another longtime fugitive, Matteo Messina “Diabolik” Denaro, a 56-year-old kingpin and “most wanted” outlaw since he vanished in 1993. Denaro, who cleverly evades justice in various hideouts, is a suspect in dozens of murders. Still, police may be getting closer to him. On April 19, 2018, they arrested Denaro’s two brothers-in-law, who allegedly ran his criminal rackets for him in Trapani, Sicily, along with 19 other associates. With the death of Riina, speculation about his successor has turned to Denaro, whose Trapani crew continues to make a good living in Sicily via extortion, fraud and skimming off public works contracts.Nemesio Oseguara-Cervantes: For years, warring drug cartels fighting over control of multibillion-dollar rackets, from drug and human trafficking to extortion, kidnapping, oil theft and illegal mining, have thrown Mexico into chaos. Since 2006, more than 200,000 people have been killed or declared missing, even with government-ordered crackdowns by the Mexican military. Efforts to limit the power of the cartels frequently fail as criminal gangs simply make adjustments. Bribery and corruption by organised crime is widespread in Mexico, extending from small-town police and politicians to officials in the federal government. Lately, Mexican federal law enforcement has declared the Jalisco New Generation cartel as the most powerful of the country’s transnational crime syndicates (others include the Sinaloa, Los Zetas, Gulf, Juarez, Tijuana and Beltran-Leyva). Jalisco New Generation started in 2010 when members quit serving as the armed unit of the Sinaloa cartel to create their own drug trafficking band. The best candidate for Mexican cartel boss of the moment is Jalisco’s reputed boss, Nemesio Oseguara-Cervantes, also known as “El Mencho.” Convicted of conspiracy to distribute heroin in California in 1994, he was released three years later and returned to Mexico to take up drug trafficking. Born in 1966, “El Mencho” is now among the DEA’s most wanted international drug traffickers under the U.S. Kingpin Act, passed by Congress in 2000 to lodge harsh criminal and civil fines against high-level drug traffickers. Mexico’s Sinaloa cartel, once the biggest and most dominant, still exists as a top narcotics supplier despite the loss of its world-famous boss, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman, to arrest in Mexico in 2016 and detention in the United States since 2017. El Chapo is on trial in federal court in Brooklyn, New York, for a daunting list of murder, racketeering and other felony charges, and is almost sure to end up serving a life sentence. After his arrest, Sinaloa members split, with some loyal to El Chapo’s sons Ivan Archivaldo and Jesus Alfredo “Alfredillo” Guzman-Salazar. Also regarded as an influential player in the mix is Aureliano Guzman, El Chapo’s brother. Two others in the top echelon of the Sinaloa cartel, Ruben Caro-Quintero, one-time head of the since-disbanded Guadalajara Cartel, and Ismael “Mayo” Zambada-Garcia, are fugitives wanted by U.S. authorities for drug trafficking, conspiracy and racketeering. Caro-Quintero is also on the radar for the kidnapping and murder of DEA agent Enrique Camarena in 1985. Caro-Quintero might be a contender with Oseguara-Cervantes for top boss of Mexican organised crime. American authorities believe Caro-Quintero directs activities of the Sinaloa drug syndicate and his Caro-Quintero trafficking organization in the Badiraguato region of the Sinaloa state. Furthermore, the U.S. State Department is still offering a $20 million reward for arrest information on the 65-year-old Caro-Quintero. The State Department also has offered a $5 million reward for information leading to Zambada-Garcia’s arrest. He is known to use airplanes, trucks and cars to transport tons of cocaine from Colombia into Mexico, plus tons of marijuana and kilos of heroin, for trafficking into the United States.Matthew Madonna: When FBI agents arrested 19 alleged leaders and members of the Lucchese crime family in New York and New Jersey in May 2017, the news media played up its association with a pop culture narrative of America organized crime. The Lucchese retained the link – or “the source of inspiration” as the British paper The Guardian put it – with the plot of the 1990 mobster film Goodfellas. The news stories included references to some of the nicknames of those arrested, such as “Paulie Roast Beef” and “Joey Glasses.” It was a good bust by the Justice Department, and as with previous disruptions of America’s La Cosa Nostra, a federal prosecutor used it as proof that the LCN still operates, even decades after its heyday from the 1920s to the 1990s. The remnants of the LCN still run crime operations in several sections of the New York-New Jersey area. Instead of only five crime families, the feds cite six – the Genovese, Gambino, Lucchese. Colombo and Bonanno Families of New York and the Decavalcante Family of New Jersey. The “administration,” or management structure, of each family consists of a boss, underboss and consigliere, followed by the usual underlings: capos, soldiers and associates. The feds cut and paste these facts into each of their indictments of LCN members. In 2019, the “acting boss” of the Bonanno crime family, Joseph Cammarano Jr., his consigliere John Zancocchio, eight Bonanno captains and soldiers in their crew, one Genovese family soldier, and a Lucchese soldier were indicted on alleged racketeering conspiracy charges that included extortion and assault with serious injury. Each of the 10 defendants could receive 20 years to life per count of racketeering. Madonna, now 82 years old, described by police as the Lucchese “street boss.” His underboss, a worse character, is Steven “Wonder Boy” Crea Sr. Their 82-year-old consiglieri is Joseph DiNapoli, and then there’s Crea’s son, Steven, who’s 46. All face life in prison from a list of felony allegations related to racketeering from 2000 to 2017. The charges, based on grand jury indictments, include one murder, two attempted murders, injurious assaults, witness intimidation, trafficking in illegal drugs (cocaine, heroin, prescription opiates and marijuana), robbery, wire and mail fraud, illegal gambling and money laundering and selling untaxed cigarettes. Madonna, Crea Sr. and Crea Jr. and two others, Christopher Londonio, 44, and Terrance Caldwell, 60, are charged with conspiring to murder Michael Meldish, a 62-year-old veteran hit man found shot in the head in his car in the Bronx in November 2013. Meldish, believed responsible for at least 10 Mob slayings, was a former member of New York’s Purple Gang, a 1980s drug-pushing ring out of the Bronx and Harlem once associated with members of the Lucchese, Genovese and Bonanno families. In May, federal prosecutors announced they would not seek the death penalty for Madonna, Crea Sr., Crea Jr., Londonio or Caldwell. However, it’s safe to say the LCN is not yet on life support. Madonna started off his career as a petty Italian hood within the Purple Gang and was close friend of Nicky Barnes. After being arrested for heroin dealing and remaining silent in prison around the time the Purples were absorbed, he was offered full membership of the Lucchese Family.

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