No Tech for Apartheid: Google Workers Arrested for Protesting Company's $1.2B Contract with Israel
Democracy Now! speaks with two of the Google employees who were arrested staging sit-ins on Tuesday at the company's offices in New York City and in Sunnyvale, California, to protest the tech giant's work with the Israeli government. Organized by the group No Tech for Apartheid, the protesters are demanding Google withdraw from Project Nimbus, a $1.2 billion contract to provide cloud computing services to the Israeli military. Google execs basically chose to arrest workers for speaking out against the use of our technology to power the first AI-powered genocide," says Google software engineer Mohammad Khatami, who was arrested in New York. Google worker-organizer Ray Westrick, who was arrested occupying CEO Thomas Kurian's office, says more people are willing to organize and risk their jobs in order to take a stand against complicity in genocide." We also speak with No Tech for Apartheid organizer and former Google worker Gabriel Schubiner, who calls on the tech industry to divest from Google and Amazon services. Technology workers actually have a lot of power to shift this paradigm and to remove technology from this deep complicity with the Israeli occupation," Schubiner says.