Amazon workers are rising up around the world to say: enough | Valter Sanchez, Christy Hoffman and Casper Gelderblom
Amazon's global infrastructure is held together by exploitation of those who operate it. And workers are pushing back
Amazon, the world's most powerful corporation, is an iceberg. Users and consumers see its top: the shops, the streaming service, the packages. But below the surface lies an enormous infrastructure, stretching across continents, linking production, distribution and delivery. A complex transnational system, populated by workers around the world whose labor drives Amazon's profits.
Its chief executive and founder, Jeff Bezos, the world's richest man, tries to conceal this system with the comfort and entertainment his services offer. The reason is equally clear and outrageous. From the factories where the products it sells are made, to the doorsteps where they are delivered, Amazon's global infrastructure is held together by the exploitation of those who operate it.
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