“The Godfather” By Mario Puzo 244
influence with the legal apparatus. But this was a formidable concession.
The Don of Los Angeles, Frank Falcone, spoke to answer. “There’s no way of stopping
our people from going into that business..They go in on their own and they get is
trouble. There’s too much money in it to resist. So it’s more dangerous if we don’t go in.
At least if we control it we can cover it better, organize it better, make sure it causes less
trouble. Being in it is not so bad, there has to be control, there has to be protection,
there has to be organization, we can’t have everybody running around doing just what
they please like a bunch of anarchists.”
The Don of Detroit, more friendly to Corleone than any of the others, also now spoke
against his friend’s position, in the interest of reasonableness. “I don’t believe in drugs,”
he said. “For years I paid my people extra so they wouldn’t do that kind of business. But
it didn’t matter, it didn’t help. Somebody comes to them and says, ‘I have powders, if
you put up the three-, four-thousand-dollar investment we can make fifty thousand
distributing.’ Who can resist such a profit? And they are so busy with their little side
business they neglect the work I pay them to do. There’s more money in drugs. It’s
getting bigger all the time. There’s no way to stop it so we have to control the business
and keep it respectable. I don’t want any of it near schools, I don’t want any of it sold to
children. That is an infamita. In my city I would try to keep the traffic in the dark people,
the colored. They are the best customers, the least troublesome and they are animals
anyway. They have no respect for their wives or their families or for themselves. Let
them lose their souls with drugs. But something has to be done, we just can’t let people
do as they please and make trouble for everyone.”
This speech of the Detroit Don was received with loud murmurs of approval. He had hit
the nail on the head. You couldn’t even pay people to stay out of the drug traffic. As for
his remarks about children, that was his well-known sensibility, his tenderheartedness
speaking. After all, who would sell drugs to children? Where would children get the
money? As for his remarks about the coloreds, that was not even heard. The Negroes
were considered of absolutely no account, of no force whatsoever. That they had
allowed society to grind them into the dust proved them of no account and his
mentioning them in any way proved that the Don of Detroit had a mind that always
wavered toward irrelevancies.
All the Dons spoke. Ail of them deplored the traffic in drugs as a bad thing that would
cause trouble but agreed there was no way to control it. There was, simply, too much
money to be made in the business, therefore it followed that there would be men who