Sunday, February 22, 2026

Mafia: A Global History …Giuffre … Wexner at al

The SCOTUS majority nearly sent all of us spiraling into bankruptcy. 
But by dint of his unfathomable brilliance, Trump will save us. 🙄



With US President Donald Trump ever more eager to push the limits of the powers of his office, the Supreme Court’s 6-3 decision to rule illegal the bulk of his totemic tariff agenda is a reassuring demonstration of enduring checks and balances in American democracy. Trump’s decision to invoke the 1977 International Emergency Economic Powers Act last year, citing a “large and persistent” trade deficit and a supposed fentanyl “crisis”, to justify sweeping import duties was dubious from the start. Besides, as the justices noted, although IEEPA enables the executive to “regulate” imports, this does not extend to tariffs.

The connections in this one interview. Virginia Giuffre reveals Epstein trafficked her to Andrew. She’s hit by a bus then “commits suicide.” The interviewer’s mother gets kidnapped and is still being held for ransom. And today, Andrew was arrested.


BREAKING: An explosive deposition clip just surfaced of Les Wexner revealing that Jeffrey Epstein claimed he was the financial adviser to Élie de Rothschild and the Rothschild family in France. Wexner says he personally verified it: "Well specifically, I talked to Élie de Rothschild. I mentioned that earlier. So he represented their whole family." Wexner also describes Epstein boasting that he advised Google’s founders, Google’s chief technologist, and Jeff Bezos — but admits he never confirmed those claims. Beyond Élie, documents show Epstein helped facilitate a $45 million DOJ settlement involving Ariane de Rothschild and the Edmond de Rothschild Swiss private bank. How deep were Epstein’s financial ties to the Rothschild family?


 The mafia’s biggest supporters? Middle-class people like you From Robin Hood to Al Capone, Ryan Gingeras explores how our enduring fascination with the ‘everyman’ bandit built a global criminal empire

From Robin Hood to Al Capone, Ryan Gingeras explores how our enduring fascination with the ‘everyman’ bandit built a global criminal empire

Ryan Gingeras grew up hearing Mob folktales courtesy of his grandfather Charley, who worked in a tough bar in the Bronx after serving in the Second World War. Among the dubious regulars was Willie Moretti, an underboss of the Genovese crime family. One day, a man known only as “The Beak” rang the bar and asked for Moretti, who was too drunk to take the call. So, The Beak told Charley to pass on a message: “Deliver the five large, or Willie’s going for a dip in the Hudson in cement shoes.”
Years later, having binged on mafia films, Gingeras worked out that Moretti was probably the inspiration for Luca Brasi, the Corleone enforcer in The Godfather who ends up “sleeping with the fishes”. Whether Moretti heeded The Beak’s message is unknown, but it certainly left an impression on the young Gingeras, who has been fascinated by mafias ever since.
Hence his ambitious new book, Mafia: A Global History, which takes in organised criminals everywhere from Noo Yawk’s goodfellas through to the Chechen mob and the Medellín cocaine cartel, via Ned Kelly, Jamaican Yardies and the Yakuza. We visit the French Connection drug labs that, in the middle of the 20th century, channelled heroin from Turkey to New York; we tour speakeasies, brothels and drug dens in 19th-century San Francisco and 1950s Beirut.
Early mafias, Gingeras says, were little more than gangs of roving bandits, and probably included the likes of Robin Hood. He and his Merry Men, it seems, probably weren’t that charming after all. The first 13th-century ballads, we learn, suggest that he was just another violent highwayman, apparently fond of beheading his victims. While he may well have targeted the rich, “it is far less clear whether he stole or killed for the benefit of the poor”. The idea of his being a medieval social-justice warrior, Gingeras explains, doesn’t arise until the 16th century, when the men of Sherwood Forest were repackaged as “champions of the common people”. Then, as now, the public couldn’t help but have a sneaking admiration for those who take on the system. As Gingeras puts it: “This kind of bandit, like the gangster or mafioso of popular media today, is the everyman.”
Early nation states, he points out, were practically mafias themselves. The basic social contract, whereby citizens lay down their arms in exchange for protection by a sovereign, is itself a grand form of “protection” racket, the only difference being that taxes sound nicer than an extorted “tribute”. Back in those more lawless times, sovereigns often co-opted local brigands as lieutenants anyway, capitalising on the fear they inspired.
An early example, Gingeras says, was Ali Pasha, a powerful Albanian bandit whom Lord Byron met on his Mediterranean travels. Pasha was by then an Ottoman-appointed governor, despite being, in Byron’s words, “a remorseless tyrant, guilty of the most horrible cruelties”. From the perspective of Turkey’s Ottoman sultans, who didn’t need him to do much except keep order, he was a canny appointment. “Having the likes of Ali Pasha on the government’s side,” Gingeras writes, “was better than gambling that he could somehow be defeated or crushed.”
The powerful Albanian bandit Ali Pasha
A ‘remorseless tyrant’: the powerful Albanian bandit Ali Pasha Credit: Louis Dupré /V&A
As governments grew stronger, old-school banditry died out. Roads, railways and the telephone network opened up the forests, deserts and mountains that had served as the outlaws’ hideouts. But the more rules the modern state imposed on people’s lives, the more there was money to be made by breaking them – particularly in the markets for booze, prostitution and drugs.
A watershed moment was Thomas De Quincey’s 1821 book Confessions of an English Opium-Eater. Much as De Quincey intended it as a cautionary tale, temperance-minded Victorians noted how much fun he suggested it could be to get stoned. The book, Gingeras says, became “a milestone for the movements that compelled states to punish anyone found dealing in ‘dangerous’ intoxicants”. From this was born the first war on drugs, with the Hague Convention of 1912 restricting the trade of both morphine and cocaine. Contrary to the claims of many drug-legalisation campaigners today, these steps weren’t taken to protect the business interests of alcohol sellers, but they, in tandem with Prohibition in the US from 1920 to 1933, did give mafias worldwide a fresh shot in the arm, and led to the first use of the term “organised crime”.
American mafias would become as powerful as corporations. (Gingeras likens Al Capone to “a hyper-malevolent Henry Ford”.) Post-war, they grew even more so: in the socially permissive 1960s, the black market for narcotics boomed. By 1988, American organised crime was making an estimated $25bn in profit a year – more than Exxon, then America’s largest firm.
Al Capone (right) exits a Chicago building with an associate during the height of Prohibition in the 1920s
A ‘hyper-malevolent Henry Ford’: Al Capone (right) exits a Chicago building with an associate during the height of Prohibition in the 1920s Credit: Chicago History Museum/Getty

At the same time, drugs helped to dissolve the old mafia codes of “family ties, trust, loyalty, obedience”, sparking violence that made the old mafia bosses look as respectable (in Gingeras’s phrase) as “company men at IBM”. And America’s modern mobsters, in turn, were mere children compared with the new cartels in Colombia and Mexico, whose feuds would wipe out not just individual mobsters but their entire families.
Well-armed, well-financed and ruthless, today’s cartels are as hard to tame as medieval bandits were. The European market for cocaine alone is now worth several billion pounds a year; much of it arrives in industrial quantities via Dutch and Belgian ports. Gingeras doesn’t cover this, but the cartels importing the drugs have also started to flex their muscles, bribing customs officers and threatening law-enforcement officials; in November, eight people were arrested for a plot to kill Brussels’s chief prosecutor. Some modern nation states have even become mafias themselves: take Venezuela, whose erstwhile leader, Nicolás Maduro, was last month arrested by the US on cocaine-trafficking charges – entirely plausible, whether a convenient pretext or not.
In general, Gingeras writes well and joins the historical dots. For instance, the drug chemists of Marseille who ran the “French Connection” heroin labs in America later set up cocaine-processing plants in Colombia. But covering so many mafias, or mafia-like groups, in 400 pages means a lot of jumping around, with some characters reduced to pencil sketches. And while a collective history may have its place, it’s up against classic books from Honor Thy Father, Gay Talese’s insider look at the Bonanno family, to Roberto Saviano’s Italian mafia exposé Gomorrah. Nonetheless, for those who want to know how mafias began – especially those as fascinated by it all as Gingeras – this book may prove to be an offer they can’t refuse.

★★★☆☆

Mafia: A Global History is published by Simon & Schuster at £25. To order your copy, call 0330 173 0523 or visit Telegraph Books

A globe-trotting history of organised crime from the Mafia to the Yakuza

HISTORY
Mafia: A Global History
Ryan Gingeras
Simon and Schuster, $37.99
American professor and historian Ryan Gingeras charts a steady course between academic respectability and formulating the odd unexpected sentence that will rock you on your heels. Try this for an original thought: “Young states are often born resembling a protection racket. Demands for taxes, tribute or spoils are among the essential features of a proclaimed state.”
“Mafia” is a term that appears to have existed in post-Renaissance Italy, although Gingeras admits that after the arrival of many North African Muslims in Sicily over the centuries, it may actually be derived from an Arabic root meaning “braggart”. To his credit, he rejects a semantically restrictive view of the term and generally treats it almost as a synonym for any form of gangsterism – practicing the dark arts of violence to satisfy one’s greed or, in the most notorious cases, bloodlust. Ned Kelly earns his rightful place in this pantheon.
His more expansive definition allows the author of Mafia to bring the creation of an entire generation of criminal confederates in Stalin’s Russia within his purview. And that is surely justified on scale alone: “Between 1934 and 1952, an estimated 18 million Soviet citizens were interned in the country’s massive gulag system.”
American historian Ryan Gingeras.
Unfortunately for the Russian people, the rise of oligarchs and a recognisable “Russian Mafia” after the fall of communism enabled a British reporter to announce that by 1994 Moscow had become “the world’s crime capital”, with “more mafia victims per week than in the worst days of Chicago, more casinos than Las Vegas per head of population, [and] more prostitutes and massage parlours than anywhere else” on the globe.
Long before they were called mafia (capitalised or lower-case), they were known as bandits or, in medieval England, highwaymen. In the Middle Ages, and indeed in ancient times, bandits roamed the countryside. Ironically, civilisation – in its technical sense of city-building – is to blame for mafiosi replacing banditry. As Gingeras says: “The dual forces of industrialisation and urbanisation created increasingly difficult environments for bandits to survive [in].”
Brigandage can be spurred on by the disintegration of a state: China’s triads flourished in the anarchic vacuum created by the breakdown of the imperial state in the early 20th century. Or, paradoxically, by the opposite tendency, the formation of a state. Naples’ camorra and Sicily’s Mafia were both borne aloft by the revolutionary forces that unified the Italian nation – in 1861, not 1860 as the author twice mistakenly asserts. (That incorrect dating of an important historical event is one of several to mar an otherwise exemplary work. To cite but two, Egypt wrested its independence from Britain in 1922, not 1919, and Mikhail Gorbachev came to office in 1985, not 1986.).
In Japan, as Gingeras adroitly points out, the yakuza had long operated unobtrusively “but matured alongside Japan’s reinvention as a nation state”.
Apart from a wholly understandable focus on the history of Mafia activities in America, Gingeras gives special (and equally understandable) weight to its machinations in Italy.
We are reminded how the brave mafia-hunting judge Giovanni Falcone was assassinated, and of just how unequal a battle it is when the state – which might be presumed in favour of upholding the law – cultivates criminal operatives. In the 1970s Silvio Berlusconi hired the services of a Sicilian gangster to guarantee his safety. “As Italy’s three-time prime minister, he raised eyebrows when he watered down anti-Mafia laws and declared magistrates who fought organised crime mentally disturbed.”
In Mexico, nine decades of one-party rule proved an ideal seedbed for fascist actions when the government’s will was thwarted. The eagerness of new president Felipe Calderon (in office from 2006 to 2012) to unleash the Mexican Armed Forces in built-up areas, though ostensibly aimed at stamping out cross-border drug traffic, “resulted in an orgy of violence unlike anything the country had seen since 1910”.
The predominant tenor of this impressive book is not doom and gloom but sober realism. Mafias will be with us until men turn into angels. Gingeras also records what the global community has achieved in its fight against darkness. On the cusp of the new millennium, the United Nations convened a conference in Sicily’s main city, Palermo, where governments of 120 countries inked a fresh Convention against Transnational Organised Crime.
The Italian government was in self-congratulatory mode, boasting that it had the Cosa Nostra on the run. Maybe so, but Gingeras adds, without the need for further comment, that the meeting took place under the watchful gaze of 10,000 security officers





Saturday, February 21, 2026

“The Case for Making Art When the World Is on Fire”

 The Case for Making Art When the World Is on Fire”I’m

Why it’s funnier when you’re not allowed to laugh

 Why it’s funnier when you’re not allowed to laugh

Attitude is a choice

 Attitude is a choice.

Happiness is a choice. Optimism is a choice. Kindness is a choice. Giving is a choice. Respect is a choice. Whatever choice you make…makes you. Choose wisely. -Roy T. Bennett






AI Chatbots Attacks May End the Internet as We Know It

Recently, openDemocracy’s website was brought down by an army of bots, just like Naked Capitalism and other publishers.

Death isn’t the end: Meta patented an AI that lets you keep posting from beyond the grave

There are two times when you can never tell what is going to happen. One is when a man takes his first drink; and other is when a woman takes her latest.


Death isn’t the end: Meta patented an AI that lets you keep posting from beyond the grave Business Insider


Friday, February 20, 2026

‘Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie’ is a rare treat

Sadly, Newtown cinema sold out for last show tomorrow 


Recommended by O and M so must be bloody great hit


‘Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie’ bound to be a festival hit

Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie

 ‘Nirvana the Band the Show the Movie’ is a rare treat


NIRVANNA THE BAND THE SHOW THE MOVIE

SYNOPSIS From Matt Johnson (BlackBerry, Operation Avalanche) and Jay McCarrol's cult comedy series comes an adventure 17 years in the making.

When their plan to book a show at The Rivoli goes horribly wrong, Matt and Jay accidentally travel back to the year 2008. 

 
For the uninitiated, Matt Johnson and Jay McCarrol’s Nirvanna The Band The Show was a cult web series where its two creators portrayed hyperactive, hap-witted versions of themselves as a musical duo desperately failing to book a gig at the storied Toronto venue The Rivoli. 

Their hilarious misadventures continued a decade later across two seasons of a Spike Jonze–produced television series, and both iterations brilliantly blended Matt and Jay’s fictional exploits with hysterically incredible real-world public interactions. Every episode overflowing with irreverent pop-culture references and nebulous copyright violations, but always culminated in a sweet-hearted expression of friendship and creative perseverance. 

 
Now the duo has returned, in a critically acclaimed, award-winning major motion picture that harmonizes with the series but stands alone. When Matt presses Jay to partake in their most death-defying publicity stunt yet, it goes spectacularly sideways, and the fallout inspires Jay to strike out on his own. 


But thanks to Matt’s inadvertent intervention with a short-lived Canadian novelty beverage, the boys find themselves travelling through time where they risk compromising their very own origin story. 

 Utilizing meticulous visual effects, costuming, and the judicious integration of archival footage, Johnson and his collaborators have crafted a satirically sobering and riotously funny cultural mirror that reflects just how much (and how little) things have changed, all the while celebrating the infectious joy of living for your dreams… with a little help from your friends.

Ireland announces new scheme providing basic income for artists

 "How could you think you are weak when every time you break, you come back stronger than before?"


Ireland announces new scheme providing basic income for artists Irish Central



He was one of Australia’s greatest fraudsters, now a documentary is uncovering his extraordinary story

Bridget McManus

February 14, 2026

Chances are, you might not have heard of John Friedrich, the visionary head of the Victorian division of the National Safety Council of Australia in the 1970s and 1980s who built an elite search and rescue operation while defrauding investors and banks of almost $300 million.

Marc Fennell hadn’t either, despite his obsession with forgotten chapters of Australian history (Stuff the British Stole, the No One Saw it Coming podcast). When the Mastermind host – along with director Corrin Grant, his collaborator on art heist series Framed and The Mission – stumbled across Friedrich’s extraordinary story, they were all in.

Marc Fennell, whose new program, Australia’s Greatest Conman, tells the story of fraudster John Friedrich. 

“We looked at each other blankly and went, ‘Sorry, there was a guy that ran his own Thunderbirds out of country Victoria?’” says Fennell. “That’s actually not a terrible starting point … It’s one thing making documentaries about things everybody’s talking about … But if we aren’t going to tell these stories, who the hell is? If this happened in America or Britain, there’d be 14 films about it by now.”

Grant was as astonished to learn of Friedrich: “I was like, ‘Why have I never heard of this guy before?’ The story got so big so quickly. And sometimes that happens in news cycles. And then it’s gone. Marc’s always saying Australians are never particularly good at telling their own stories. And this is an incredible story.”


Featured in the two-part series Australia’s Greatest Conman? are three journalists who have never forgotten Friedrich: Hugh Riminton, Kerry O’Brien and Richard Fidler, a former member of the Doug Anthony All-Stars comedy group who lampooned the manhunt for Friedrich.

“Kerry O’Brien said the strangest thing to me,” says Fennell. “He said, ‘This is the most frustrating story I’ve ever worked on.’ Think about the years of work that man has done and his legacy as a journalist. That is an interesting admission.”

Finding former National Safety Council employees from the time in question willing to speak proved difficult. Many went on to work in emergency services and didn’t want to compromise their careers. Some were too traumatised, unable to trust anyone ever since. Others remained fiercely loyal to Friedrich.

“I would ask, ‘If John walked into this room right now saying I’m getting the band back together, would you follow him?’” says Fennell. “And a surprisingly large number of people were like, ‘Yep! In a heartbeat.’ There’s a million conman stories out there, but here you have a guy who didn’t do it to make himself rich.”

The interviews are mostly shot inside sheds or pubs.

“I wanted it to feel like you’re overhearing a conversation,” says Grant. “It’s like, ‘Here’s a story that’s so great you can barely believe it. Stay with me, because this is real.’”

Friedrich was the head of the Victorian division of the National Safety Council of Australia.

A pub rock soundtrack accompanies archival footage of National Safety Council training exercises that are pure James Bond. Along with para-rescue involving dogs and even pigeons, the group pioneered aerial firefighting. 

“People that came across the National Safety Council will say, ‘Oh, they had a lot of toys. They had a lot of equipment,’” says Grant. “And it feels, especially towards the end when the spending gets out of control, [Friedrich] was almost just collecting them. And so I thought that there was that playground that he created … Not the people that were involved. They were doing incredible work.”

For Fennell, the most fascinating part of Friedrich’s story is the deception.

“Anyone who’s ever lied about anything knows that those lies do weigh on you,” he says. “It’s a cumulative effect. I look at footage of [Friedrich] towards the end and I swear you can see it – the weight of the lies. You watch these interviews with him with Kerry O’Brien and [the late] George Negus, and he’s playing cat and mouse, but I can see the pain of him trying to keep his balls up in the air. You could argue that the lesson is about the weight of that on him.”

Australia’s Greatest Conman? premieres at 8.30pm on February 24, on SBS and SBS On Demand.