LinkedIn's Mafia problem
It's a major job market conspiracy. You really have to be a made man in the Mafia in order to have an account at LinkedIn. Once again, the books are closed to new hires outside the major crime famililes.
We have to deal with people who just don't like us, follow us everywhere we go, frequently call cops on us with patently false charges and formal trespass nonsense, tell lies about us in court, etc., etc. "Made men" are hiring college grads "within the family" and rejecting outsiders, in all jobs and professions including government civil service, military service and law enforcement duties.


There's an inordinate amount of motivational speaking and mental health chutzpah on LinkedIn. Many of us are outsiders to their job market, fully legal to work, but too busy here and simply not available for that sort of work. Ideally you have clear achievable and accountable goals and objectives at work. That's what you do and that's what you get paid for. Let's not get stressed out about it either. Something full time, year in year out, requires a measured pace. Certain employees who are a little bit too driven and aggressive or ambitious have a persistent habit of beating and bullying targeted individuals out of the job market. Otherwise, what's the big deal? Any halfway decent honest hardworking human being who is reasonably skilled or talented at any sort of profitable work ought to be paid for it. Easily, and most definitely in any free market.
So what's with all the pavement pounding, long involved interview processes, extended background checks, and bloody sermons from administrative law judges coupled with hostile labor union rhetoric? The average person looking for work is more likely to have his or her identity stolen online and bank account cleaned out than to land an interview or get a bona fide job offer applying for any posted open position.
And that's a "cop shop" talking. Once the major metropolitan police departments throughout America became fully unionized and rebelled against the FBI, the Mafia opened the membership rolls to working cops on the beat at the city and state levels.
Many businesses as well as local police and fire departments etc. are owned and operated by crime families where "the books are closed" to new hires outside the major crime families.
"The Commission" (of police union bosses, certain corporates and associated "friends") had its own set of books of course, and as soon as these were merged with those of the Gambinos, the combined books were once again closed.
When the mafia says the books are closed for membership, does that imply that there is an actual membership book?
If the books are closed, what’s in it for new people?
by u/ThePunkGang in thesopranos
And if you own guns without being a made man in the Mafia, then you have additional problems.

THE HILL: ADMINISTRATION:
Trump officials refer Biden-era FEMA staff to DOJ for potential criminal charges
The DHS did not respond to detailed questions from The Hill and the release leaves murky who is being referred to the Justice Department. ¶But the data mined by the Privacy Office appears to come from Survey123, a FEMA tool that pairs with ArcGIS software and allows canvassers to make notes about properties they visited or were unable to visit as part of their efforts to alert residents to aid. ¶The office reviewed “keywords” referenced in the tool, finding a few instances of mentions of political figures while the majority referenced potential guns in the home. Employees can leave notes in the tool to detail their interactions with homeowners or why they may not have been able to access a property, however the report leaves unclear the context in which Trump was raised in the 15 comments.


