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Archive for February, 2009

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Posted by Maestro On February - 10 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

Do you wear an eyeglass? If you do, then how much have you spent to buy it? If it takes so much, then you should share your time to log on to the nytimes.com website.

In this website, you would find an article titled “Seeing Straight Without Breaking Bank”. This article is the one that will certainly tell you everything you should know in picking an eyeglass. You could also get the chance to buy the prescription eyeglasses for only $8! Read the rest of this entry »

Why Do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms? (18)

Posted by Maestro On February - 9 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

For J. T., violence was a distraction from the business at hand; he would have preferred that his members never fired a single gunshot. For a foot soldier, however, violence served a purpose. One of the few ways that a foot soldier could distinguish himself—and advance in the tournament—was by proving his mettle for violence. A killer was respected, feared, talked about. A foot soldier’s incentive was to make a name for himself; J. T.’s incentive was, in effect, to keep the foot soldiers from doing so. “We try to tell these shorties Read the rest of this entry »

Why Do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms? (17)

Posted by Maestro On February - 8 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

Most of J. T.’s foot soldiers were unwilling to stay foot soldiers for long after they realized they weren’t advancing. Especially once the shooting started. After several relatively peaceful years, J. T.’s gang got involved in a turf war with a neighboring gang. Drive-by shootings became a daily event. For a foot soldier—the gang’s man on the street—this development was particularly dangerous. The nature of the business demanded that customers be able to find him easily and quickly; if he hid from the other gang, he couldn’t sell his crack. Read the rest of this entry »

Why Do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms? (16)

Posted by Maestro On February - 7 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

The delicate balance between these factors helps explain why, for instance, the typical prostitute earns more than the typical architect. It may not seem as though she should. The architect would appear to be more skilled (as the word is usually defined) and better educated (again, as usually defined). But little girls don’t grow up dreaming of becoming prostitutes, so the supply of potential prostitutes is relatively small. Their skills, while not necessarily “specialized,” are practiced in a very specialized context. The job is unpleasant Read the rest of this entry »

Card Printer Solutions

Posted by Maestro On February - 7 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

The using of printers nowadays has been played important role for the life of people. It seems like that printer is one of the primary things that must be owned by people in fulfilling they needs relating with documents. One kind of documents that often printed by people is ID card. There are several kinds of paper material that used as printer paper, such as PVC paper. Then, where is the place to get printer that can use PVC paper as print paper? Read the rest of this entry »

Why Do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms? (15)

Posted by Maestro On February - 6 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

To the kids growing up in a housing project on Chicago’s south side, crack dealing was a glamour profession. For many of them, the job of gang boss—highly visible and highly lucrative—was easily the best job they thought they had access to. Had they grown up under different circumstances, they might have thought about becoming economists or writers. But in the neighborhood where J. T.’s gang operated, the path to a decent legitimate job was practically invisible. Fifty-six percent of the neighborhood’s children Read the rest of this entry »

Why Do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms? (14)

Posted by Maestro On February - 5 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

Along with the bad pay, the foot soldiers faced terrible job conditions. For starters, they had to stand on a street corner all day and do business with crackheads. (The gang members were strongly advised against using the product themselves, advice that was enforced by beatings if necessary.) Foot soldiers also risked arrest and, more worrisome, violence. Using the gang’s financial documents and the rest of Venkatesh’s research, it is possible to construct an adverse-events index of J. T.’s gang during the four years in question. The results are astonishingly bleak. Read the rest of this entry »

Why Do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms? (13)

Posted by Maestro On February - 4 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

So the top 120 men on the Black Disciples’ pyramid were paid very well. But the pyramid they sat atop was gigantic. Using J. T.’s franchise as a yardstick—3 officers and roughly 50 foot soldiers— there were some 5,300 other men working for those 120 bosses. Then there were another 20,000 unpaid rank-and-file members, many of whom wanted nothing more than an opportunity to become a foot soldier. They were even willing to pay gang dues to have their chance. Read the rest of this entry »

Why Do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms? (12)

Posted by Maestro On February - 3 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

Mercenary fighters were nonmembers hired on short-term contracts to help the gang fight turf wars. The cost of weapons is small here because the Black Disciples had a side deal with local gunrunners, helping them navigate the neighborhood in exchange for free or steeply discounted guns. The miscellaneous expenses include legal fees, parties, bribes, and gang-sponsored “community events.” (The Black Disciples worked hard to be seen as a pillar rather than a scourge of the housing-project community.) The Read the rest of this entry »

Why Do Drug Dealers Still Live with Their Moms? (11)

Posted by Maestro On February - 2 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

The gang that Venkatesh had fallen in with was one of about a hundred branches—franchises, really—of a larger Black Disciples organization. J. T., the college-educated leader of his franchise, reported to a central leadership of about twenty men that was called, without irony, the board of directors. (At the same time that white suburbanites were studiously mimicking black rappers’ ghetto culture, black ghetto criminals were studiously mimicking the suburbanites’ dads’ corp-think.) J. T. paid the board of directors nearly 20 percent of his revenues for the right to sell crack in a designated twelve-square-block area. The rest of the money was his to distribute as he saw fit. Read the rest of this entry »

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