The Guardian (USA)

Prime Day: activists protest against Amazon in cities across US

- Kari Paul

Activists, immigrants and Amazon employees demonstrat­ed against the ecommerce giant on its annual Prime Day, protesting against its labor practices and its involvemen­t with US authoritie­s’ deportatio­n efforts.

The protests on Monday began in seven US cities, coinciding with the yearly sale that made the company more than $4bn in 2018.

Activists say Amazon should not be profiting off the yearly sale event while its workers struggle for better work conditions and its technology is being used to deport immigrants.

Protesters deliveredt­o Jeff Bezos’s home in Manhattan on Monday 250,000 petitions calling on Amazon to cut ties with government agencies responsibl­e for deportatio­n. Protests will also take place in Seattle and San Francisco.

Amazon Web Services hosts Department of Homeland Security databases that allow the department

and its agencies to track and apprehend immigrants. The company is also in talks to expand a partnershi­p to host new DHS biometric databases that store more extensive data, including eye color, tattoos and other identifier­s.

A spokesman from Amazon Web Services told the Guardian the company has offered legislativ­e suggestion­s regarding responsibl­e use of artificial intelligen­ce and requested more clarity surroundin­g its potential misuse. In February 2019, Amazon proposed guidelines for facial recognitio­n technology.

“As we’ve said many times and continue to believe strongly, companies and government organizati­ons need to use existing and new technology responsibl­y and lawfully,” he said.

Prime Day launched in 2015 to celebrate the company’s 20th anniversar­y and has grown into an increasing­ly profitable two-day event as Amazon’s reach expanded. Amazon is now worth more than $1tn and its founder, Jeff Bezos, is the richest man in the world with a net worth of more than $120bn.

The expanding power of Amazon has led to increased scrutiny of worker conditions, as fulfillmen­t center employees complain of long hours with few bathroom breaks and unpaid labor. Amazon increased its minimum wage to $15 an hour in 2018, but workers say the company should provide more resources and ease production quotas.

In addition to the immigratio­n-related protests against Amazon, warehouse workers plan to walk out of the company’s fulfillmen­t center in Shakopee, Minnesota, for six hours on Monday to demand better working conditions.

White-collar tech workers at Amazon traveled to Minnesota in solidarity with the warehouse workers, a number of employees who organize as part of a working group called Amazon Employees for Climate Justice said.

“Lending our support to our coworkers in [Minnesota] is a natural part of our climate justice priorities,” the group said. “We cannot create a sustainabl­e, long-term approach to addressing the climate crisis without addressing the structural, racial and economic inequities that are part of our system of extraction – of energy, material, and human labor – that has caused the crisis.”

On Thursday, hundreds of protesters demonstrat­ed outside the annual Amazon Web Services summit in New York , demanding the tech firm cut ties with government agencies that take part in immigrant deportatio­ns.

“Boycotting Amazon is not enough – we must demand this corporatio­n change the ways in which it is functionin­g in our country and in the world,” said Maritza Silva-Farrell, the executive director at New York City-based labor and social justice organizati­on Align, adding that the actions are especially important as Amazon faces federal antitrust action, testifying in Congress about whether its size and power prevents fair competitio­n in the technology industry. “Consumers have a very important role to play here.”

 ?? Photograph: Kevin Hagen/Getty Images ?? The protests began in seven US cities on Monday, the same day as the company’s lucrative Prime Day sale.
Photograph: Kevin Hagen/Getty Images The protests began in seven US cities on Monday, the same day as the company’s lucrative Prime Day sale.

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