Do you remember
the 1957 meeting of Mafia bosses in Apalachin, New York? About 100
of the Big Bosses met at the home (it must have been large!) of
local Mafia chieftain Joe Barbara, and the local police became curious
when they noticed numbers of expensive cars with out-of-town license
plates at the Barbara home. The cops, acting on the principle of
"arrest now, ask questions later," arrested as many of
the men as they could catch, and a prosecutor named Milton Wessel
subsequently tried them on conspiracy charges. What conspiracy?
Well, when the men refused to say what they were doing at the Barbara
home, that was enough, in Mr. Wessel’s mind, to convince him that
nefarious things were transpiring. Twenty men were convicted, and
fifteen sentenced to the maximum term of five years in prison. Less
than a year later, the Appeals Court for the 2nd Circuit
overturned the convictions, pointing out that the government had
not produced a shred of evidence that any crime had been committed.
Mr. Wessel subsequently became a professor of law at Georgetown
University.
What brought
this episode to mind was the recent meeting in Trinidad of another
group of powerful men – including, of course, President Photo-Op-bama,
at what has been called the Summit of the Americas. These "summit"
meetings seem to have become woven into the fabric of contemporary
life, so that their occurrences are not regarded with the interest
that, perhaps, they deserve. The president’s first foreign trip,
perhaps not technically a "summit," was to Canada, in
February, where he met with Canada’s Stephen Harper, and they both
said nice things about each other, and reassuring things about the
status of the world, with the inevitable promises of continuing
"dialogue."
Then he went
to London, at the end of March, for something called the "G20
Summit." He didn’t accomplish much there, but the European
press thought he was just wonderful, and liked Michelle, too. Gosh,
he looked good, and talked good, and had a nifty wife, to boot!
She’s even planted a garden, and plans to raise their own food!
Wow!
In April, he
was off again, this time to the aforementioned Trinidad, for the
latest summit. He shook Hugo Chavez’s hand, which was, I guess,
the most newsworthy event at that meeting. Was that handshake a
good thing – or a bad thing? It reminded me of the story of the
psychiatrist who, on a walk, encountered someone who said "hello"
to him. This left the psychiatrist puzzled. "Just what did
he MEAN by that," he fretted.
So what’s the
common denominator in these four "summit" meetings? Secrecy.
In this day and age, the world’s rulers could easily meet via closed
circuit TV, and save a bundle in travel expenses. But hackers could
probably get access to the goings-on. Face to face, walking in the
garden, or riding in a car, the rulers can achieve privacy – the
sort of privacy that, when achieved by Mafia bosses, constitutes
"conspiracy" and merits a jail sentence! When achieved
by the government rulers, it means statesmanship, and merits the
greatest reverence.
Did the Mafia
chieftains meet to find ways to better the lives and fortunes of
the people they controlled? Hardly. Do you think the "legitimate"
rulers meet to explore ways to make us richer, or free-er? That
would be the day! And they are rulers, not leaders. If they were,
as they would have us believe, actually leaders, they could send
their heads of state to these meetings. We have, after all, a Secretary
of State, renowned far and wide for her expertise and knowledge
of international affairs. She and her foreign counterparts could
work out the details of whatever their respective governments needed
to discuss. But when the head men themselves meet, person to person,
there’s skullduggery afoot, and it certainly won’t be the banal
pap and drivel that will be published or broadcast; rather, stuff
too important to be written down, published, or entrusted to underlings.
Mafia summits
are bad enough, but the Mafia bosses are only local. When the international
bosses, self-important nabobs who can argue that, because they are
the law, whatever they do is proper and legal, get together, watch
out! Whatever they decide, it’s not likely to be for your good,
or mine.
May
4, 2009
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is author of All
Work & No Pay, which is out of print, but may occasionally
be obtained on eBay.