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On Jan 31, 3:21*pm, Giles wrote:
On Jan 31, 4:13*pm, DaveS wrote: On Jan 28, 5:21*pm, flebow wrote: On Fri, 28 Jan 2011 16:47:42 -0800 (PST), " wrote: On Jan 28, 4:34 pm, "JT" wrote: wrote in message Is there a way to delete a person? I don't mean killfile. I mean delete. No idea, however if you figure it our please let me know. I'm thinking we may want to delete the same person. JT This is just a hypothetical question. I'm not naming names. Moron. I useta know some guyz from Joisey but no mo' If you find someone I will chip in a few $$$ Imbecile Now now. I ustobee fum Jersey and any implication that organized crime would normally be available for retail eliminations etc is inconsistent with my recollections. The "families" were pretty selective, for example only one person from my entire large HS class was ever made a "made man" as far as I know. They worked more on fear and need than on violence. And just because one member of a family was mob, did not mean that others in the extended family were mob, and I knew kids of probable mob families who went to junior college with me and went on to more or less legit lives. The idea that they just go around whacking average civilian people is Hollywood BS. Smaller arrangements, say breaking an arm, fingers, a leg, but not heads, were available in our rough circle at retail by independent punk enterprise (mostly Irish) at affordable levels. Its kinda like the 5 cent beer of our grandpas, but 45 years ago the price per limb was about $35-$50, cash in advance. . . . $100 bucks more if you wanted a cop to do it, but then the risk was ongoing blackmail. Wellllll...... O.k., so, a couplea guidos from sout fillie showin' up on da doorstep wit sawed offs blazin' is like WAY to retro?.....and it's all just a myth, anyway, right? * O.k. *I'll take your word for it.....I mean, when have you ever lied to your old goomba.....ainna? *And, yeah, it's a bit of a relief. But this business of SOSF at $35-$50 a pop (so to speak) is still a bit worrisome. *Hell, a syndicate of eight to twenty-three or so bubbas and sparkies could easily pool their resources and come up with enough to make a boy wish he'd kept up with the TAE Bo payments. * * * *:( Besides, all of your information (while held in high esteem.....naturally) might possibly (I'm just saying) be a bit dated by now.....what with all that family history being out east and the aggrieved parties of the first parts in this particular instance being decidedly west of the Alleghennies and all. And a boy ain't as.....um.....spry (yeah, that's the term!) as maybe he once was.....maybe. *Hell, I've been to the "West". *I've seen a high school girl's volley ball team. *And in today's troubled economic climate.....well.....I'm just saying. A bus ride east.....spike a few balls.....and back home again. *Who even knew you were gone....,.right? * * *:( I once watched 2 "detectives" offer my old man, Bosco, a small but lucrative painting contract in return for cooling his campaign against our local Republican mayor/trucking magnate who had zoned most of our township for warehouses. This "Republican" had the tacit franchise to run our township from the County Democratic Big Boss, Dave Wilence (sp?) out of Perth Amboy. Bosco had organized a bunch of younger Korea vets and barflys from our part of hell to fight the mayor. My old man told the cops to shove it and consequently, they screwed with us for years after until one of the old man's Italian friends made them stop it. Right and wrong could get pretty complex in Jersey in those days. Dave Your old man was called "Bosco"?! goddamn COOL! * * * * *:) giles right and wrong ain't complex......negotiation is.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It is a family nickname. It means young boy in Italian (we thought). We were not the right ethnicity and so could never be proper "family." Thankgoodness. I guess Ive never told my "Diamond Jim's laborer day" story here. Or my "Dumbassed criminals I have known" story. And I won't. All as true as an old memory can make them. ;+)) All was not crooked in the Jersey of my youth, but enough was to nudge me West. Dave Ill have one of those "Right or Wrong" cocktails like he had. Not too complex please. |
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On Jan 31, 8:48*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Jan 31, 3:21*pm, Giles wrote: On Jan 31, 4:13*pm, DaveS wrote: On Jan 28, 5:21*pm, flebow wrote: On Fri, 28 Jan 2011 16:47:42 -0800 (PST), " wrote: On Jan 28, 4:34 pm, "JT" wrote: wrote in message Is there a way to delete a person? I don't mean killfile. I mean delete. No idea, however if you figure it our please let me know. I'm thinking we may want to delete the same person. JT This is just a hypothetical question. I'm not naming names. Moron. I useta know some guyz from Joisey but no mo' If you find someone I will chip in a few $$$ Imbecile Now now. I ustobee fum Jersey and any implication that organized crime would normally be available for retail eliminations etc is inconsistent with my recollections. The "families" were pretty selective, for example only one person from my entire large HS class was ever made a "made man" as far as I know. They worked more on fear and need than on violence. And just because one member of a family was mob, did not mean that others in the extended family were mob, and I knew kids of probable mob families who went to junior college with me and went on to more or less legit lives. The idea that they just go around whacking average civilian people is Hollywood BS. Smaller arrangements, say breaking an arm, fingers, a leg, but not heads, were available in our rough circle at retail by independent punk enterprise (mostly Irish) at affordable levels. Its kinda like the 5 cent beer of our grandpas, but 45 years ago the price per limb was about $35-$50, cash in advance. . . . $100 bucks more if you wanted a cop to do it, but then the risk was ongoing blackmail. Wellllll...... O.k., so, a couplea guidos from sout fillie showin' up on da doorstep wit sawed offs blazin' is like WAY to retro?.....and it's all just a myth, anyway, right? * O.k. *I'll take your word for it.....I mean, when have you ever lied to your old goomba.....ainna? *And, yeah, it's a bit of a relief. But this business of SOSF at $35-$50 a pop (so to speak) is still a bit worrisome. *Hell, a syndicate of eight to twenty-three or so bubbas and sparkies could easily pool their resources and come up with enough to make a boy wish he'd kept up with the TAE Bo payments. * * * *:( Besides, all of your information (while held in high esteem.....naturally) might possibly (I'm just saying) be a bit dated by now.....what with all that family history being out east and the aggrieved parties of the first parts in this particular instance being decidedly west of the Alleghennies and all. And a boy ain't as.....um.....spry (yeah, that's the term!) as maybe he once was.....maybe. *Hell, I've been to the "West". *I've seen a high school girl's volley ball team. *And in today's troubled economic climate.....well.....I'm just saying. A bus ride east.....spike a few balls.....and back home again. *Who even knew you were gone....,.right? * * *:( I once watched 2 "detectives" offer my old man, Bosco, a small but lucrative painting contract in return for cooling his campaign against our local Republican mayor/trucking magnate who had zoned most of our township for warehouses. This "Republican" had the tacit franchise to run our township from the County Democratic Big Boss, Dave Wilence (sp?) out of Perth Amboy. Bosco had organized a bunch of younger Korea vets and barflys from our part of hell to fight the mayor. My old man told the cops to shove it and consequently, they screwed with us for years after until one of the old man's Italian friends made them stop it. Right and wrong could get pretty complex in Jersey in those days. Dave Your old man was called "Bosco"?! goddamn COOL! * * * * *:) giles right and wrong ain't complex......negotiation is.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It is a family nickname. It means young boy in Italian (we thought). It's a family friendly drink.....I thought. We were not the right ethnicity De nada. No one is. You get used to it.....or not.....as the case may be. and so could never be proper "family." Thankgoodness. Probably (or, possibly, at any rate) a blessing. In either case, it costs nothing to count it as such. I guess Ive never told my "Diamond Jim's laborer day" story here. Or my "Dumbassed criminals I have known" story. Not that I recall. And I won't. Damned shame. Mark Twain (who'da thunk HIS name would be invoked here, ainna?) said much the same thing in his autobiography, the latest edition of which (or a portion thereof, at any rate) is currently available both in hard copy and in (a nearly unreadable) downloadable version. He said, at some great length and numerous times, that an honest autobiography is, for reasons we need not go into just at the moment, literally impossible. Well, yeah, if one gives a **** about public opinion and suchlike trivia.* All as true as an old memory can make them. ;+)) Truth is stranger than friction, they say. I wouldn't know......seems like a slippery slope either way to me. All was not crooked in the Jersey of my youth, Actually, all WAS crooked in the Jersey of your youth.....and still is. but enough was to nudge me West. where things are no different. Only the legends change. Dave Ill have one of those "Right or Wrong" cocktails like he had. Not too complex please. Shaken or stirred?.....like it makes a ****in' difference. giles bartender to the world. *and, yes, there were (and are) other reasons. |
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On Mon, 31 Jan 2011 14:13:32 -0800 (PST), DaveS
wrote: On Jan 28, 5:21*pm, flebow wrote: On Fri, 28 Jan 2011 16:47:42 -0800 (PST), " wrote: On Jan 28, 4:34 pm, "JT" wrote: wrote in message Is there a way to delete a person? I don't mean killfile. I mean delete. No idea, however if you figure it our please let me know. I'm thinking we may want to delete the same person. JT This is just a hypothetical question. I'm not naming names. Moron. I useta know some guyz from Joisey but no mo' If you find someone I will chip in a few $$$ Imbecile Now now. I ustobee fum Jersey and any implication that organized crime would normally be available for retail eliminations etc is inconsistent with my recollections. The "families" were pretty selective, for example only one person from my entire large HS class was ever made a "made man" as far as I know. They worked more on fear and need than on violence. And just because one member of a family was mob, did not mean that others in the extended family were mob, and I knew kids of probable mob families who went to junior college with me and went on to more or less legit lives. The idea that they just go around whacking average civilian people is Hollywood BS. Smaller arrangements, say breaking an arm, fingers, a leg, but not heads, were available in our rough circle at retail by independent punk enterprise (mostly Irish) at affordable levels. Its kinda like the 5 cent beer of our grandpas, but 45 years ago the price per limb was about $35-$50, cash in advance. . . . $100 bucks more if you wanted a cop to do it, but then the risk was ongoing blackmail. I once watched 2 "detectives" offer my old man, Bosco, a small but lucrative painting contract in return for cooling his campaign against our local Republican mayor/trucking magnate who had zoned most of our township for warehouses. This "Republican" had the tacit franchise to run our township from the County Democratic Big Boss, Dave Wilence (sp?) out of Perth Amboy. Bosco had organized a bunch of younger Korea vets and barflys from our part of hell to fight the mayor. My old man told the cops to shove it and consequently, they screwed with us for years after until one of the old man's Italian friends made them stop it. Right and wrong could get pretty complex in Jersey in those days. Dave Did you live nar Trenton? and if so do you remember what it says on the Trenton Bridge? Fres |
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On Feb 1, 10:42*pm, flebow wrote:
Did you live nar Trenton? and if so do you remember what it says on the Trenton Bridge? Fres- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I lived between New Brunswick and Heightstown, with the Pennsy mainline thru the woods and a few fields. From the mainline of the Pennsy . . . "What Trenton makes, the world takes." Or in Jerseyese. . . "you got a problem wit dat?" Or is that the State motto? I forget sometimes as it has been close to 50 years. My relatives still back there take great offense at stuff like "Jersey Shore" and that Jersey dress store TV show. And continuing immigration has moderated some things. But there has always been this defensive/ chip on your shoulder thing and no reluctance in getting the first whack in at the first sign of threat. Kind of a stereotype but with just enough truth in it to . . . . As usual, TV picks up on the extremes. But they do sell tee shirts at Newark airport which say, "New Jersey, the beatings will continue until moral improves." Braggadocio is evident, like in the bumper stickers I noticed at a funeral last summer on some kids' cars which parodied the Army PR campaign and said "Jersey Tough." And the USMC is still the preferred service. Dave Jersey does a pretty good job with their trout streams, in conserving some farmland, and still has some of the most tenacious farmers in the country. If my folks had the NJ land our ancestors had I would be growing potatoes, soybeans and corn there. Today I would be dusting the frozen fields with lime and checking seed instead of writing this. |
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On Wed, 2 Feb 2011 13:16:39 -0800 (PST), DaveS
wrote: On Feb 1, 10:42*pm, flebow wrote: Did you live nar Trenton? and if so do you remember what it says on the Trenton Bridge? Fres- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I lived between New Brunswick and Heightstown, with the Pennsy mainline thru the woods and a few fields. From the mainline of the Pennsy . . . "What Trenton makes, the world takes." Or in Jerseyese. . . "you got a problem wit dat?" Or is that the State motto? I forget sometimes as it has been close to 50 years. My relatives still back there take great offense at stuff like "Jersey Shore" and that Jersey dress store TV show. And continuing immigration has moderated some things. But there has always been this defensive/ chip on your shoulder thing and no reluctance in getting the first whack in at the first sign of threat. Kind of a stereotype but with just enough truth in it to . . . . As usual, TV picks up on the extremes. But they do sell tee shirts at Newark airport which say, "New Jersey, the beatings will continue until moral improves." Braggadocio is evident, like in the bumper stickers I noticed at a funeral last summer on some kids' cars which parodied the Army PR campaign and said "Jersey Tough." And the USMC is still the preferred service. Dave Jersey does a pretty good job with their trout streams, in conserving some farmland, and still has some of the most tenacious farmers in the country. If my folks had the NJ land our ancestors had I would be growing potatoes, soybeans and corn there. Today I would be dusting the frozen fields with lime and checking seed instead of writing this. "What Trenton makes, the world takes." The few times I drovw that way w my familiy I would always say "What Fred makes we all take" It was also featured in a few films but I cannot recall which ones Fred |
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On Feb 2, 3:35*pm, flebow wrote:
"What Fred makes we all take" Which explains rather nicely why so many tens of millions leave their shoes at the door. g. |
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On Feb 2, 1:35*pm, flebow wrote:
On Wed, 2 Feb 2011 13:16:39 -0800 (PST), DaveS wrote: On Feb 1, 10:42*pm, flebow wrote: Did you live nar Trenton? and if so do you remember what it says on the Trenton Bridge? Fres- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I lived between New Brunswick and Heightstown, with the Pennsy mainline thru the woods and a few fields. From the mainline of the Pennsy . . . "What Trenton makes, the world takes." Or in Jerseyese. . . "you got a problem wit dat?" Or is that the State motto? I forget sometimes as it has been close to 50 years. My relatives still back there take great offense at stuff like "Jersey Shore" and that Jersey dress store TV show. And continuing immigration has moderated some things. But there has always been this defensive/ chip on your shoulder thing and no reluctance in getting the first whack in at the first sign of threat. Kind of a stereotype but with just enough truth in it to . . . . As usual, TV picks up on the extremes. But they do sell tee shirts at Newark airport which say, "New Jersey, the beatings will continue until moral improves." *Braggadocio is evident, like in the bumper stickers I noticed at a funeral last summer on some kids' cars which parodied the Army PR campaign and said "Jersey Tough." *And the USMC is still the preferred service. Dave Jersey does a pretty good job with their trout streams, in conserving some farmland, and still has some of the most tenacious farmers in the country. If my folks had the NJ land our ancestors had I would be growing potatoes, soybeans and corn there. Today I would be dusting the frozen fields with lime and checking seed instead of writing this. *"What Trenton makes, the world takes." The few times I drovw that way w my familiy I would always say "What Fred makes we all take" It was also featured in a few films but I cannot recall which ones Fred- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - "Baby we were born to run." ;+)) Dave |
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