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gangsterism

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gangsterism

Organized crime, particularly in the USA as a result of the Eighteenth Amendment (Prohibition) in 1919.

Bootlegging activities (importing or making illegal liquor) and speakeasies (where alcohol could be illegally purchased) gave rise to rivalry that resulted in hired gangs of criminals (gangsters) and gun battles. One of the most notorious gangsters was Al Capone.

The law was difficult to enforce; illicit liquor could be brought into the USA over the long land-borders or coastline, and illegal distilleries were soon established. Social unrest and a widening gap between rich and poor also created a climate in which crime flourished. In 1933 the Twenty-First Amendment was passed, repealing Prohibition. This, and the actions of the Federal Bureau of Investigation under J Edgar Hoover, limited the opportunities for the gangster and contributed to some reduction in crime.


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But they've never made a comprehensive effort to secure our streets and take on the dysfunctional culture that breeds gangsterism.
Dan Froot, in his portrait of Jewish gangsterism, Shlammer (2002), features a live klezmer band complete with violin, euphonium, and accordion players.
She sees the Bush administration's global democratic revolution/reconstruction project as kindred to the subsidized gangsterism that turned post-Soviet Russia into a huge sty of official corruption, with commissars, corporate criminals, academics, and internationalist bureaucrats all gorging themselves at the aid trough.
 
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