Yes, supplying drugs. Steroids are drugs. They're illegal. A lot of money is made on steroids and ecstasy, and, as I said earlier, God knows what's in them.
Anyway, in terms of youth gangs, I think a lot of people get in for a lot of reasons, but one of them is the profit motive. A lot of them graduate to larger organized crime gangs. As you get a little more sophisticated.... You see, for a lot of the youth gangs and younger gangs, the ones selling drugs on the street are one thing, but a lot of the early Mafia groups, let's say, and Asian crime groups, if you look at Asian crimes, started with extortion when they were younger, in their twenties.
Extortion doesn't get you very much money, but it gets you money, and you generally extort people from that community. It's going on right now with the Tamil Tigers. Other groups are extorting recent immigrants, I suspect, in the Somali community and others. It's a long pattern, and it goes back to the early Italian immigration in the 1920s. Most of the original Mafia groups were involved in extortion. But that doesn't make you money, so you move to more sophisticated things, like international crime and drug trafficking on a large scale, from heroin to cocaine and marijuana. I think the younger gang members get into where there's more money, so they get into the organized crime gangs.
Those are two ways they get in.
As for women, Margaret didn't mention this, but back in the 1920s and 1930s, there were women who ran the Mafia in Ontario, Bessie Perri and Annie Newman, so they're not exactly newcomers. Rocco Perri, who was the gang boss in charge of most of the bootleg booze coming from Canada into the United States, relied for all his decisions on them. Whether it was killing a customs officer or corrupting a customs officer, he relied on Bessie and on his women. He couldn't do it without his women.
Antonio wrote a book about this too. It's quite amazing, in fact, that women were in that role, and our history on this has never been told. We get all of our history from American television, so naturally the Canadian history isn't there, but there have been women in crime. As Bessie said to Rocco back in the teens, when prohibition was coming, “We'd better get into this, because there's a lot of money to be made.” They made a fortune: the equivalent of hundreds of millions of dollars today. She was draped in diamonds and they had a big mansion. Of course, she was murdered, so there is a moral to the story, and her murder is still unsolved 60 or 70 years later.
I've said enough.
Antonio, do you want to add anything?