0:00
No, I quit standing around. Get back to
0:04
Your little revolution is over. Pay the
0:07
troublemakers what they are owed, then
0:10
send my regards to Dontoi. See you in a
0:41
You're handy with a knife, mind boy.
0:44
There might be hope for you yet.
0:46
He was all talk. If he had any balls, he
0:49
would have taken his money already.
1:05
workers are the point.
1:07
They were owed their pay.
1:09
Right or not, we can't have labor unions
1:11
on the dawn's turf. We are in favor of
1:13
free enterprise around here.
1:15
Lazy idiot. Maybe if they stop
1:18
complaining, they might earn decent
1:20
money. It's easy for you to say. What
1:23
have you ever had to work for? I'm
1:25
working now, aren't I? Is that what you
1:27
There were always Union people around
1:29
Kora. Even protests when I was small,
1:33
but nothing got better.
1:34
It never does. Back in the '90s, the
1:39
unions were everywhere. The dawn, Tino,
1:42
and me. It broke strikes. It was our
1:46
Shame it has to come to that.
1:48
The world is as it is. We keep orders so
1:51
people can work. That's good in its own
2:06
You see there, that tower? You're coming
2:10
I heard of it. It's a town on the sea.
2:13
The Galante family operates here.
2:15
They're friends of ours.
2:20
Sure. Like the tuna. Donalante runs the
2:23
shore. He goes way back with my uncle.
3:55
The Galantes run this port. They know
3:58
everything that comes in, everything
4:01
Bottles from around the world come off
4:02
the boats straight into the bar. And the
4:09
they earn good money. And they rarely
4:11
have to get their hands dirty either.
4:18
remember these are friends of