Based Camp | Simone & Malcolm Collins

Mob, Mafia, MS-13: Why Catholics Created Most US Criminal Orgs

Jun 2, 2025
Delve into the intriguing ties between Catholic immigrant groups and organized crime in the U.S. The hosts explore cultural roots, comparing the Irish mob and Italian mafia to modern gangs like MS-13. They discuss 'amoral familialism' and how family loyalty impacts criminal dynamics. The podcast also uncovers the Vatican Bank's shadowy connections with organized crime and the romanticization of outlaws. Through these discussions, they reveal how Catholic teachings and community structures have shaped the landscape of crime and morality.
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INSIGHT

Catholics' Link to Organized Crime

  • Major organized crime groups in the U.S. historically originated from Catholic immigrant populations like the Irish, Italian, and Latin American groups.
  • Catholics' prevalence in crime networks contrasts with fewer large criminal organizations from non-Catholic immigrant groups like the Russians or Chinese.
INSIGHT

Organizational and Urban Roots

  • Catholics' exposure to hierarchical church bureaucracy taught them organizational skills rare among other immigrant groups.
  • Their urban settlement in dense cities enabled large, family-based criminal organizations to form unlike frontier-settling Protestant groups.
INSIGHT

Distrust of Government Fosters Crime

  • Catholic immigrants distrusted U.S. government due to experiences with corrupt or weak governance in their home countries.
  • This skepticism made organized crime a parallel power structure for managing disputes and community power.
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