bsas said:Yeah, there's tons of organized crime in Buenos Aires. Watch out for the group known as the Polis. They go by Poli-cia and Poli-ticos. You can't always spot them by the color of clothes they wear, but I've heard they're prone to wearing mustaches - the bigger the better, and in the case of one notorious member, expensive Louis Vuitton bags and enormous amounts of makeup.
I'm more worried by the opposites "gang" than the actual in power, these really are the "Gangs of BsAs", maybe now that Francis Ford Coppola is living here he can make a film of similar vein and homage as Martin Scorsese did to the city of New York.
bsas said:Yeah, there's tons of organized crime in Buenos Aires.....but I've heard they're prone to wearing mustaches
Maybe that's is why one of them shave it off to desguise himself from gang association.
laureltp said:I just watched a documentary on the bloods and crips. It made me wonder if there were gangs here or if that's just us. Anybody know?
You would think with all the Italian immigrants there would at least be a mafia here (just kidding, anyone of italian decent, please don't get mad, my grandparent's are saltinos so i think that gives me some kind of right to pick on them a bit )
There are not 'mafia' gangs in Argentina as they're or were in USA...why? Who knows...of course there's organized crime here like they exist in any society but because the meaning of the word organization as such is practically unknown by the gangs and the people of this country that they never got well enough organized to make up to the 'mafia' status...
Now seriously, Gangs are formed were there is ignorant, bigoted cultural prejudiced racism and exclusion from the society as a whole to others ethnicity and culture, people behaving this way is because they feel fear, intimidation and exclusion from the rest, there's a sentiment of not belonging therefore the necessity to form part of something and by that closing ranks between themselves become the only logic way to be recognized and respected by their peers (humans), by agglutinating their ethnicity they keep the identity, forming unintentionally at first a gang or a sect or congregation or a ghetto to belong to, balancing with this the rejection from the rest of society for some of them this is the only way to go, some parts of these groups will melt and disappear between the next generational changes painfully fitting with the rest of society and some will go the other way to form a separate and close identity of their own.
Migrant people on this country never did have those problems, 'so far', because assimilation in this society was very smooth, fast and painless there were no differences between different cultures and what is more important, no rejection and hassling to any new culture or ethnicity, almost all of them merge together without any racial tensions in between the first generation therefore there was no necessity to form gangs to preserve identity and sense of belonging to the society.