As The Greek says, just before walking away forever: "The price of a brick goes up, the price of a girl goes down. That’s the business." And in the end, the union, the detail, the dead women—they are all just inventory.
Unlike Avon Barksdale, The Greek has no corner to defend. He is capital in human form—mobile, amoral, untouchable. When a rogue stevedore steals a load of his drugs, he doesn’t send corner boys to shoot it out. He sends a man named Sergei, and the problem is solved with a nail gun and a vacant rowhouse. When a prostitute becomes a liability, she is strangled and dumped. When the FBI finally gets a lead on The Greek, a corrupt agent inside the bureau tips him off with a single word: "Counterterrorism." The Greek simply vanishes, leaving his pawns to die. The Wire Season 2 Complete Pack
Frank Sobotka is the heart of the season. He is not a kingpin; he is a crumbling titan of labor. The docks are dying—automation, globalization, the death of the blue-collar dream. Frank bleeds for his stevedores, begging politicians for dredging money, for a grain pier, for anything to keep the lights on. His son, Ziggy, is a loud-mouthed, insecure peacock with a pet duck and a talent for disastrous schemes. His nephew, Nick, is the steady, weary middleman trying to survive. As The Greek says, just before walking away
In the end, the union is broken. The grain pier is approved—too late for Frank. The dockworkers are scattered. Major Valchek gets his vengeance and is promoted to colonel. Jimmy McNulty, in a fit of nihilistic rage, burns his own investigation files on the floor of his apartment. He is capital in human form—mobile, amoral, untouchable
The detail arrests Nick Sobotka for conspiracy, but he gives them nothing. Sergei is caught, but he won’t break. The Greek and Vondas fly to a new city, a new port, a new season of crime. The dead women are buried as Jane Does.
Season 2 is the most misunderstood and arguably the greatest season of The Wire . It expands the universe from the street to the system. It argues that the drug war is not just about dealers and addicts—it is about the death of legitimate work. Frank Sobotka is not a hero, but he is not a villain. He is a man who loved something that no longer exists. And in the new American economy, that love is the most dangerous thing of all.