Identity, Lobbying, Migration

I grew up in the New York metropolitan area where it wasn’t uncommon for someone to call themselves Italian. It was usually shorthand for saying that your parents, grandparents, or maybe even great-grandparents had migrated from Italy, usually the southern half, places like Naples and Calabria and Apulia. People were proud to call themselves Italian even though they weren’t born there, had never stepped foot there, didn’t hold Italian citizenship, and often didn’t know more than a handful of Italian words (which half the time were actually dialect). But still, they were Italian, and the rest of us accepted that never thinking much of it.  

Then, a few years back, I began hanging out watching soccer games at a bar tucked into an East Village side street that I would soon realize was a sort of unofficial club-house for Italian ex-pats in New York (Italy had already made its transition into the first world decades ago. Those who left the peninsula now had college degrees and professions. They stopped being immigrants and started being ex-pats).

These Italians were often amused by Americans calling themselves Italians. It never angered them or left them irritated. They seemed more just non-plussed by it. Even the quintessential “Italian” food, spaghetti and meatballs and chicken parmesan and garlic bread, they explained to me, were actually Italian-American, “completely unknown in Italy.” 

I once witnessed one of the managers answer the phone while tending bar. The caller asked if they had baked ziti on the menu. “No,” he said. “We have real Italian food,” he then quietly hung up the phone, not waiting for a response. 

One winter afternoon, as an Italian soccer game on TV deep into the second half trickled to its anti-climatic finish (Juve won), one of the Italian dudes, L., began telling a story (in English for my benefit) about his American girlfriend. Now, his girlfriend’s parents were from Italy, Italian was the girl's first language and she spoke it as a native does, and she spent many long childhood summers under the hot Italian sun, absorbing the air, traditions, and pop culture. “She says she’s Italian, but she’s not,” L. said, as an aside to his story. All the other Italians nodded their heads in agreement. “Not at all,” their nods said.

I was surprised but kept silent. I later left wondering, what exactly is an Italian? I knew it wasn’t like being American where your birth on American soil, no matter where your parents are from, no matter if they’re in the U.S. on vacation, makes you (at least in theory) as American as someone descended from the Minute Men. But these guys didn’t even think this girl, whose parents hailed from Italy and who knew the culture and spoke the language just as they did, was Italian? Not at all? Being Italian meant something different to them. It wasn’t just an ethnic group based on a shared (perhaps imaginary) past. It was also an experience. An experience in a certain place. But then there’s someone like Mario Balotelli, an Italian soccer player born in Sicily to Ghanian parents, who had that experience in that certain place, who many say isn’t “really” Italian, either. 

No doubt I’m over-simplifying things here. But where do Black Italians, or Italians say, of Romanian or Chinese origin, fit in Italian society? This is something I’d really like to delve into when I make a reporting trip to Italy. The country, after all, has received the greatest influx of migrants in Europe, which has led, among other things, to the surge of the far-right, and Nigerian organized crime groups building a foothold in Sicily, home of the mafia. Now, as in much of western Europe, Black Lives Matter protesters are taking to the streets. On a related note, here is a sad story about a young Pakistani migrant who was stabbed to death in Sicily, allegedly by a Pakistani gang, for speaking out about wage-theft in the farming sector.

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Former Republican presidential candidate Bob Dole has mined his long political career to become a major lobbyist, and he just signed on to represent a Chinese chemical company. 

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this is a great short piece from Slate about the basics of el paquete, the thumb drives Cubans pass around that allow them to download what they want from the internet, even though they don’t actually have access to it. Harper’s published a great piece a few years ago about it too. 

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Here is a narrative-driven story about the Sea-Watch 3, its rescue operations, and a case in front of the EU Court of Justice that alleges coordination between the Libyan coast guard and the E.U. to prevent migrants from crossing the Mediterranean Sea to Europe. The story of migration is one of the biggest stories of our time and is tied to the other giant stories: climate change and surveillance. 

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Covid and Cruise Ships

I saw a small report about this alleged con-artist in the art world last fall and didn't pursue the story because I was just unsure of how to even start. British GQ just published a great story about the guy. It really draws you in, and it would have received much more attention if we weren't living in this strange covid-19 time where virtually everything in the papers and online is about covid-19 or is covid-19 adjacent. 

But even when reporters tackle the same story, they leave to write different pieces. Just look at how Bloomberg, GQ, The Economist, and Wired took on the story of the Diamond Princess, the cruise ship that was stranded in the waters just outside Tokyo in February after they reported a Covid-19 case on the ship, and the cruise ship industry more generally. 

Doug Bock Clark at GQ told the story of the ship through the eyes of different people stranded on it. First came a pair of first-world vacationers, then came a cruise ship worker from the third-world, next a vacationer from Hong Kong, then the ship captain, and on. It really draws you into the drama and shows the entire industry from different perspectives. Only at the end does the story pull back to reveal what this means for a changed world. 

At Wired, Lauren Smiley took the same approach, but in miniature and included more people. It seemed like more reporting might have gone into it, but she zoomed out much more often. 

The Economist took the same approach as well, telling the story from different, passenger perspectives (but neglected the captain and the cruise staff). The piece has the classic structure of a feature story with a lede and a nut graph (actually a slew of paragraphs). Meanwhile, Bloomberg's feature focused on the cruise ship business. 

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Thoughts in the time of Covid-19

I've barely ventured out of the house in three weeks. Not because I'm a shut-in. Covid-19, a deadly flu-like virus transmitted to humans via bats, has swept out of China and into Europe and the U.S. We've been ordered to stay at home, except for essential workers. Many people have already commented on this, but many of the workers who have newly been deemed essential--grocery store cashiers, street cleaners, bus drivers--were thought of as low skill, easily replaced workers who didn't deserve to make much above minimum wage, let alone a middle-class living. 

Anyway, leafing through the newspaper, virtually every article is about Covid-19 (perhaps rightfully so), and I don't have much to add, besides pointing to this piece that highlights the danger of authoritarians using the crisis to swipe more power. 

The Department of Defense has awarded contracts to companies to meet emergency measures in New York. An Evangelical NGO, Samaritan's Purse, has set up a field hospital in a patch of central park. A for-profit company, Parsons Corporation, has been awarded a contract to do the same in Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx. What I'm about to line out has already been reported out in local outlets, so I'm treating this as a reporting exercise that readers can follow along with. 

The company given the contract for the field hospital in Van Cortlandt Park is the colorless sounding Parsons Corporation. A search of Open Corporates shows that they are located in northern Virginia and that their CEO is Charles Harrington, and their treasurer is Shelly Green. 

The contract, for $40 million, is for six months. It started on April 3 and ends on October 3, according to USspending.gov. 

Parson's was incorporated in 1978 in... Delaware. They chose that state for its lax regulations, Delaware's laws are why many rich people and corporations don't have to hold their money off-shore. According to Wikipedia, the company was first established in the 1940s. The corporation is owned by an agent called, "The corporation trust company," located in 1209 Orange Street, Wilmington, Delaware. This information is all from Open Corporates and, no doubts, all sounds very boring. But it's the first step in peeling back the lid to see how things really go down in this country.

Oh, and they landed in some trouble with the Inspector General's office for some work they did (or didn't do) in Iraq after the American invasion. What they do in the Bronx with their $40 million could be an interesting story to return to in a few months. 

Anatevka

It seems like every journalist in America is covering Trump and the ever-increasing crew of shady people who orbit him. Like everyone, I'm struck by Trump's connection to Russians in New York. His dad owned brutalist, high-rise apartment buildings in Brighton Beach. Felix Sater and his own dad were some sort of Russian gangsters in south Brooklyn. A relative of Michael Cohen owned El Caribe, which many say was a mobbed-up restaurant (the restaurant even figured as a key backdrop in a 2007 Mark Wahlberg movie, "We Own the Night"). A remarkable amount of Russians reside in Trump Tower in midtown Manhattan. And then there's Lev Parnas, a Brooklyn raised Ukrainian American businessman who, apparently, was working with Rudy Giuliani doing *something* in Kiev, with Igor Fruman. 

I don't have anything remotely new say about this. But all the same, I want to highlight a short video showing Giuliani, Parnas, and Fruman seated at a table, smiles wrapped around their faces, making a toast to... Anatevka. 

That might sound familiar to you if you've ever seen, "Fiddler on the Roof." Anatevka. The fictional village where it all takes place. There's been this quixotic attempt in the last few years to renew the shetl world of Ukraine. I first read about in Le Monde two years ago, and now Giuliani and his (ex) partners are involved. This raises giant question marks in my head. Something about it just doesn't add up, and I'm going to investigate further. 

I recently stumbled on a newsletter covering the Trump Hotel in DC: 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue. The reporter has taken to covering this location full-time: https://1100pennsylvania.substack.com/. Activities like this are a real public service and help us make sense of what's really going on, and all the money changing hands behind the scenes of power. 

Some thoughts and links

I've long wondered how much influence different countries can really exert in Washington D.C. The practice of hiring agents to lobby for your interests is one of the most remarked about elements of American democracy. Companies do it, so do countries, so do individuals. Here is an interesting piece from The Diplomat about a state senator who doubles as a D.C. lobbyist for Cambodia, a country at the mercy of a dictatorial regime and bad human rights record. 

I imagine the reporter first heard about this state senator from Open Secrets this report. I would've thrown up my hands, assuming I had nothing to add, but this reporter was able to dig deeper into the story. That’s a lesson.

While not too many state senators work as foreign lobbyists, I'm sure there are all sorts of stories in the FARA world. I was browsing FARA filings last night and was struck by a few things, like how the Marshall Islands spends so much in foreign lobbying, as does the China Daily of Beijing, a newspaper in China. 

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I love narrative stories that show two protagonists who aren't villainous but whose interests come into conflict. I also love stories that peel back the lid on what are hidden worlds for many (that might be one reason why mafia movies have such appeal). This story from last month's New York Times accomplishes both: Where Rent Is $13,500, She Lives Off What’s Left at the Curb

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The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project does such great work in such complicated territory. Here's a story they recently published on a Russian Oligarch close to Putin: The Chef’s Global Footprints.

World Cup Thoughts

The World Cup has finally finished and France has been crowned champion. Over the past month I’ve spent an unconscionable amount of time watching soccer games, and I have to say, most of the games were mediocre. The best soccer is in the Champions League, and that’s been the case for years now.

But something about the World Cup has always excited me. Like many a soccer fan, I measure out my life by the tournament’s four-year increments. Every four years, the tournament makes me mind drift back to the first World Cup when I was a kid that truly brought me under its spell: the 1994 World Cup.

And yet, this World Cup was different. I increasingly felt like I was wasting my time watching games. “It’s just a sport, who cares?” ran through my head every time I saddled up a chair to watch a game at my favorite bar. Plus, the U.S. team failed to qualify. The team finished fifth place in its six-team qualifying group. You might not believe this, but the team still would’ve qualified if, in its final match, it fought Trinidad and Tobago to a tie. Instead, the US team lost 2-1.

What really bothers me about the team’s flop is that no one has truly stepped up to hoist the blame onto their shoulders. Every statement from the coach, the players, the federation officials, has been a, “yes, but…” statement. Former US captain Claudio Reyna seemed the only one willing to step forward with some hard truths: that the US soccer community is dripping with arrogance and failure is the result.

It’s hard to argue with that. Exhibit A is coach Bruce Arena saying that he has nothing to learn from Pep Guardiola and wishing for the “European hotshots” to play against central American teams, then they’d see how hard the US’s qualifying road is (England bested Panama 6-1 at the beginning of the tournament).

US soccer would do well to follow Iceland’s example. We’re talking about a country of 330,000 who’ve managed to pump out enough quality players to qualify for this World Cup and the last Euro. How did they do it? They invested in coaching. Every coach in Iceland, down to youth coaches training seven-year-olds, studied for a UEFA A license. That’s serious. They learned how to develop players. That’s something US soccer needs.

I could go on. But then again, it’s only a game.

Interesting piece of information

You gotta give credit where it's due, and today it's the New York Post. The paper dug up something interesting about a relatively minor Bronx politician and Albanian organized crime. Two guys who donated a few thousand bucks to Bronx Assemblyman Mark Gjonaj's political campaign in January landed under indictment this summer. The pair, Xhevat Gocaj and Martin Shkreli (no, not the infamous jerk. He apparently has a namesake.) were named in a federal indictment in July for money laundering, drug dealing, and arms sales--we're talking anti-tank rocket launchers and machine guns.

According to the Post article, the two were working at the behest of a guy named Andre Veliu. Veliu allegedly told people that his cousin was Alex Rudaj. I wonder if they actually are cousins.

Rudaj is supposedly the godfather of Albanian organized crime in New York. Sure looks interesting.

Sunshine Week

Sunshine Week is upon us.  Perhaps you've never heard of it. It celebrates the public's right to know what the government does in its name. In honor of the week, The Center for Responsive Politics, which runs OpenSecrets.org, has posted a new database online: Foreign Lobby Watch.

Back in 1938, the U.S. Congress passed a law that required people and organizations who received foreign governmental funds to report the particulars of what they were doing for their clients. to the U.S. Justice Department.  That means that, if Russia hired a DC lobbying firm, the firm would have to tell the Justice Department exactly what it was doing for the Russians. The law, called FARA, was supposedly a response to Nazi propaganda in the U.S.

Good use of this database could reveal some meaty stories hidden in plain sight. Open Secrets has published some interesting tidbits already, for instance, An Egyptian intelligence agency hired public relations firms Weber Shandwick and Cassidy & Associates to improve its image.

The Center for Responsive Politics is now working on a second phase of the project, that will add functionality and allow users to connect the data to other datasets.

Gay Talese at The Strand

At seven o’clock last Thursday, a clerk planted two bottles—one Coca-Cola, one water—on the table of a stage on the third floor of The Strand Bookstore. Five or so minutes later Gay Talese strode in through the back entrance, dressed as usual in a hand-tailored suit. He walked on stage and sat down to chat with the evening’s moderator, Robert Boyton.  The next hour flew by. Talese wrote what many regard as the greatest long-form magazine article of all time, “Frank Sinatra has a cold,” published in Esquire in 1966. But Talese didn’t stop there, he published a slew of other exceptional pieces. He was at The Strand to promote a new collection of his stories: “High Notes.”

But he needed little prompting to expound to a rapt audience of 50 or so about the craft of journalism.  I sat in the crowd, furiously scribbling notes into my reporter’s pad. Here are some of the highlights, but they’re not verbatim, and there are a bunch of stories he recounted and advice he gave that I don’t mention:

-In talking to people, you have to know how to get the door open, how to knock and make people feel okay enough to initially crack open the door. Then you’ve got to know how to make your pitch. To that end, he thinks about why he wants to know what they do. He ends up telling them, “I think what you do is representative of the time,” and explains why he thinks so. Maybe the person isn’t famous, but they represent values other people say and think.

-A good reporter has to have genuine curiosity, and ask himself, how am I different from the people I’m writing about. It’s paramount to try to understand people and see things from their point of view. You’ve got to think: how did they grow up? Where did they come from? Unfortunately, he said, he doesn’t see that happening so much anymore. Later on, he referenced how the American media covers Vladimir Putin, who Talese thinks has been somewhat demonized.

-He wondered aloud how freelancers earn a living nowadays. When he reported, “the Frank Sinatra piece,” as he called it, he stayed in a luxurious hotel for 33 days and ran up an expense account of $3,000. And this was in the ‘60s.  He also dished out that, until he landed back in New York, he didn’t think that not talking to Sinatra would actually make for a better story.

-“You need a storytelling mentality,” he said. In his case, it came from reading John Cheever stories, “somewhere between high school and college.” Talese wanted to write non-fiction short stories, scenically, dramatically.

-His father’s hometown in Calabria, the region that occupies the toe of the Italian boot, left a deep impression on him when, as a young man in the army, he went to visit. “It was 1955, but it could’ve been 1555,” he said. Farm animals wandered into the houses and lived beside the town’s inhabitants in abject poverty. And he and some of these people shared a surname. His father never returned to the town once he’d left.

The town sprouted out of the side of a mountain, and mules were the only transport. Many of the town’s residents had no idea what life was like beyond the next village.   And, he recollected, there he stood, wearing an American military uniform that he didn’t feel entirely comfortable in.  “I saw myself as a farmer, as a guy whose father didn’t make a nine-day boat trip,” he said.

-Next, he was onto his reporting process. He begins by trying to make himself and the other person both feel comfortable. He compared it to a first date, saying, “I want to know that person, but without interviewing.” Rather than get a specific answer to a specific question, he’d rather have a sense of the person. He doesn’t parachute in and out, he sticks around. “You’re not going to get everything you want on the first try,” he told the audience.

-He always feels a responsibility toward the people he’s writing about. He always tries to act respectfully and to never knowingly do anyone any harm. He doesn’t like, “gotcha journalism.” People, he explained, can be easily misunderstood or say something they don’t mean. So you’ve got to ask yourself, “did I treat them right?”

-Toward the end of the hour, he reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a cardboard sleeve. He had jotted down the name of a young reporter who had just written a long piece in The New York Times. He would’ve proud of the piece, he said, had it been his. He implored the crowd to check out the article, written by Caitlin Dickerson.

-A young journalist asked him about confidence: How do you get it? “You get to be confident because you are satisfied you did your best,” Talese replied. “What gives me confidence and satisfaction is that I never did anything that I was ashamed of. I always felt I had to be honorable about my work.”

“If you believe you’ve done your best, and that doesn’t give you confidence, nothing will,” Talese said. What a quote to end the night.