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Tuesday 27 November 2018

Slowly but surely, the Amazon Prime backlash is coming

Prime-branded boxes in an Amazon fulfillment center in Hemel Hempstead, England on November 13, 2018.

More people are calling on others to cancel their Amazon Prime subscriptions. Why’d it take us this long?

I set a reminder on my calendar to cancel Amazon Prime before my subscription ran out in July about a year ago. It was not exclusively a noble decision; I wasn’t really using it all that much, and nearly everything I bought, I could have found at the litany of convenience stores near my apartment, a privilege that not everyone shares. Plus, all the Prime shows kind of sucked!

But there was also an increasing ickiness to paying $100 a year to line the pockets of the richest man the world has ever known, a man who has continually thwarted his underpaid employees’ efforts to improve the dire circumstances of working for Amazon. More than any other company’s, the Amazon-branded cardboard boxes that lined the package room in my building seem sinister, despite their literal smiley faces.

This isn’t anything new, of course. People have been aware of Amazon’s shittiness for decades, from its monopolistic practices to tax avoidance, poor treatment of both white- and blue-collar workers, union-busting, environmental damage, and most recently, the year-long publicity stunt of HQ2, a bad-faith ploy to extract private data from US cities that ended with Amazon plopping its supposedly economy-boosting offices into the two most established markets on the East Coast.

But despite the fact that most of this is old news, this year, something is different. Having covered Black Friday for the past few years, I’m used to the infinite roundups of Amazon’s best Black Friday and Cyber Monday deals — which, to be sure, won’t be going anywhere as long as publishers are able to monetize them. But what I hadn’t seen as much before this year were media companies openly discouraging readers from shopping at Amazon, like this Ringer piece on how to wean yourself off by using other online retailers, and the story from the tech site Gizmodo, which previously called Prime “the best deal in tech,” calling for a Prime Day boycott.

Journalists and writers have also become far more willing to vocalize anti-Amazon sentiments. On Thanksgiving, Jia Tolentino of the New Yorker tweeted that she had canceled her Prime subscription during a week when many on Twitter encouraged their followers to do the same.

Tolentino tells me that even though she felt her own Amazon patronage was inexcusable ever since Mac McClelland’s 2012 piece about going undercover as a warehouse worker, the final straw was the 10-figure tax breaks the city of New York promised to Amazon for HQ2. “I had directly contributed to this situation and I felt like shit,” she says.

Another writer, Julia, who asked me not to use her last name because she works for a production company that could conduct business with Amazon Studios in the future, says she canceled her subscription after seeing the film Sorry to Bother You, which offers a stark critique of capitalism.

“I had Amazon Prime for about a year, and during that time, I watched my whole approach to consumption change,” she says. “A stack of boxes started to accumulate next to my recycling bin, and I was sort of horrified to realize how greedy I’d become. We’ve all become so accustomed to getting whatever we want, whenever we want, at little to no cost. But when anything is that cheap, there’s always someone paying for it.”

The efforts of those who speak out against Amazon seem to be influencing others as well, even if it’s contained within the echo chamber of Twitter. Podcaster Kyle Amato says he finally cut the cord when Marian Bull, a writer and ceramist, offered a free handmade cup to anyone who canceled their Prime membership last week. “I was being a hypocrite if I just kept using Prime while speaking out against Amazon proper,” he says.

To be clear, a massive exodus of Amazon Prime is still far from our present reality. By all accounts, the number of Prime subscribers is growing, and as of this spring, there are more than 100 million of them worldwide. The phrase “cancel Amazon Prime” peaked on Google Trends in December 2017 and has been in decline since then. And yet the tide appears to be turning, in part due to a slew of negative press, condemnations from politicians, and very public worker strikes.

“The backlash has actually grown slower than I would’ve thought, given that Amazon’s labor abuses have been well-documented for a long time,” says Tolentino. “The worker strikes have done a lot. But Amazon succeeds in large part because the entire labor economy is overheating and everyone’s safety nets are disappearing: people are so busy, people have less and less money to spare outside rent and health care, and so it’s easy to just close your eyes and cut corners by getting that free shipping when you can.”

And for many, that free shipping and convenience is a lifesaver. In a recent Twitter thread, social work student Carey Kirijo explained their complicated feelings about the wave of people publicly canceling their Prime subscriptions, noting that for those with disabilities or mental health issues, as well as those who live in rural areas, the decision is much more fraught.

Kirijo explained that their disabling mental illness sometimes prevents them from leaving the house for long periods of time, and social anxiety means that tight aisles and bright lights have the potential to trigger panic attacks, which makes online shopping a huge help.

“I really, really love online retail as a tool,” Kirijo says, “But I think that with the lack of regulation, especially massive corporations like Amazon, there are opportunities for retailers to take advantage of workers and the system as a whole. Amazon workers should be allowed to unionize, and other steps should be taken to protect working conditions. We need to be having this conversation about Amazon, and I’m happy we’re having it, on the understanding that Amazon probably isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.”

And there is the other question: Even if lost subscribers becomes a major problem for Amazon, it won’t undo the damages its success has wrought on the world. A New York Times investigation earlier this fall explained that in a rush to compete against Amazon, other retailers like Verizon have exploited warehouse workers, too many of whom have fainted or even experienced miscarriages while on the job due to grueling conditions.

What, then, could Amazon do to answer for its crimes? “If Amazon warehouse workers were unionized, and if the Postal Service union were able to successfully advocate for better conditions for the delivery drivers who are overwhelmed with Amazon packages, that’d be good,” Tolentino offers.

“I think we’ll have to sacrifice a lot of conveniences to allow for humane conditions at Amazon,” Amato adds. “It’s such a beast at this point. It either needs to be broken up or nationalized, and I’m not sure where to start. I can only fight with my wallet.”

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from Vox - All https://www.vox.com/the-goods/2018/11/26/18112769/amazon-prime-cancel
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