Showing posts with label feudalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feudalism. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 14, 2020

COVID-19: Catalyst For Change?

If this was the "best week" since 1938, I'd hate to see what a worse one would be like.

COVID-19: Catalyst For Change?
by Coast Watcher 

Almost seven hundred years ago a severe plague broke out that altered the nature of the world. Known as the Black Death, it originated on the northwest shores of the Caspian Sea. It spread into Europe in the years 1346-53 and killed over a third of the entire population. The spread was slowed by winter weather but could last through it. By the time the plague burned itself out an estimated 50 million people across Europe had died.

The contagion caused a massive decline in trade, but coincidentally it also led to the decline of the feudal system that had governed most of Europe for some five hundred years. The threat of military and police power by the feudal landowners fell away as their armies and loyal servants perished. Land cultivation declined drastically as the population fell, causing a rise in labor costs. Ordinary workers could demand remittance for their work instead of owing their liege lords unpaid servitude. The same applied to the professional classes in the towns, who saw the demand for their work rise. In a comparatively short time the Medieval world gave way to the Renaissance.

Lesson learned from history: Something good can come out of ill for the ordinary people, but it's not going to be easy. The serfs/workers still had to demand better wages and conditions--they weren't simply given to them.

Almost six hundred years later, another pandemic broke out that proved far deadlier even than the Black Death. The so-called Spanish Flu infected an estimated 500 million people worldwide—about one-third of the planet’s population at the time. It seemed to target the young and healthy, being particularly deadly to 20- to 35-year-olds. In three waves from March 1918 to the spring of 1919, it killed an estimated 20 million to 50 million victims, including some 675,000 Americans.

Rising in 1918 at the end of the First World War, the flu was first observed in Europe, the United States and parts of Asia before swiftly spreading around the world. Spain, being at peace at the time was able to focus on containing the disease and a great deal was written in the uncensored Spanish press. This extensive coverage at a time when the rest of Europe was occupied by war unfairly implied that the disease originated in Spain.

It’s believed now that the first case occurred in Fort Riley, Kansas, where new recruits were trained before being sent to Europe to fight. The disease spread with extraordinary rapidity. It crossed the Atlantic aboard troopships carrying American soldiers to the battlefronts of France.

In several countries preventative measures were put in place. Effective vaccines were a dream for the future, but twentieth century medical knowledge and practices were more advanced than those of the fourteenth century. The best methods of fighting the flu pandemic were quarantine, good hygiene practices, disinfectants, and a limitation of public gatherings. Citizens were ordered to wear masks and keep isolated. Schools, theaters and businesses closed. Bodies piled up in makeshift morgues. If the first wave of the flu appeared highly contagious, the second that lasted into 1919 proved deadlier yet before the virus ended its deadly progress around the world.

Lesson learned: Don't call it quits too early on preventative measures or else the pandemic could come back--even worse the second time around.
So, once again the world is suffering a crisis brought on by disease. Similar to the Spanish Flu, the COVID-19 virus covers the world, although not every country has suffered the horrendous casualties seen in China, Italy and the US. Once again the good old standby methods of quarantine, good hygiene practices, disinfectants, and a limitation of public gatherings are being used to contain the spread of the virus. 

However, a number of governors have refused to order even basic measures such as self-isolation/shelter in place. Some churches stubbornly remain open, citing their constitutional right to do so while claiming religious ‘protection’ from the illness. It’s no coincidence that COVID-19 infections are rising rapidly in the congregations of these selfish institutions. And it will come as no surprise that those countries with socialized medicine are coping far better with the outbreak than the United States with its commercialized healthcare system.

Lesson yet to be learned in the US : Health care should be about taking care of  all the people, and not simply lining the pockets of the health industry CEOs.

Like the Black Death, the socioeconomic effects of this newest disease is likely to lead to massive change. It’s already projected that over 195 million people worldwide face unemployment due to the closure of businesses. Responses to this economic shock wave vary. The US initiated massive bail-outs of private corporations using public money to the tune of over four trillion dollars. Citizens are to be granted a meager $1,200 in a one-off payment which will be counted against taxes. 



The response in other countries, even those with right-wing governments, has been far better. In the UK the government is guaranteeing the wages and salaries of citizens up to 80% of their income. The same method is being used in New Zealand, Denmark, France, Australia and Germany. Rent and mortgage freezes are another tactic, although these are set to run for a limited time only.

Both Trump and Democratic candidate Joe Biden are eager to get the economy moving again, sacrificing public health and safety in an effort to do so. Really,

they’re turning the public into COVID-19 fodder. Frontline workers now encompass not only first responders, but grocery store staff, delivery people and even gas station operators. Trump’s handling of the outbreak is so inept as to be criminal. That he knew about the onset of the coronavirus threat months in advance and did nothing is a matter of public record. That he closed the Homeland Security office for pandemics and slashed the CDC budget is known. That he’s attempting to profit off the crisis by pushing a suspect drug as a cure is also known. It makes Trump no better than an Old West snake-oil salesman. As for Biden, he has stated that in the unlikely event of his becoming president he’d veto a universal healthcare bill even if it clears both houses of Congress.

The shut-down and lack of income has already caused thousands of Americans

to lose their jobs and homes, something the government seemingly doesn’t care about in its efforts to protect Wall Street. The chances are the general mood of the public will turn ugly indeed when food supplies become scarce, profiteering reaches high levels, and the same-old-same-old offerings of the two so-called major parties will cease to appeal to the public’s need for change. 

The Democrats will likely cancel the convention this year, citing Biden’s near certainty of getting the nomination and the threat of spreading coronavirus as the reasons. I think it also possible that Trump, in another one of his frequent "blood rushing to what passes for his brain" moments will declare himself President for Life, citing it as "being in the public’s best interest."

The new post-COVID-19 reality will be like nothing we’ve seen. The closest the world has come to this reality is Europe post-Black Death. It’s entirely possible that a whole new world will emerge from this crisis, one that is overwhelmingly in favor of the working class. 


A lesson we can't afford to miss: Workers must keep an eye on the establishment. They read history, too, and they won't take too kindly to the serfs exerting their power over the tiny handful of billionaires who currently rule, but we've got to do it. One thing for sure, it’ll be an interesting ride.

Resources:
Wilde, Robert. "The Black Death: The Worst Event in European History." ThoughtCo, Feb. 11, 2020, https://thoughtco.com/the-black-deat-1221213.

https://www.thoughtco.com/1918-spanish-flu-pandemic-1779224

BIO: Coast Watcher says we can't let the lessons learned from this pandemic be wasted. It's time for all workers to stand up to the establishment and demand better pay and safer working conditions. Now isn't the time to kiss up to the oligarchs. We've got them where we want them--strike!


https://youtu.be/weppAOaRdSE

Other related articles:

The President and the Plague
https://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/62381-focus-the-president-and-the-plague

The Ultimate Stress Test: The American World Covid-19 Reveals
https://readersupportednews.org/opinion2/277-75/62378-the-ultimate-stress-test-the-american-world-that-covid-19-reveals 

"It Feels Like a War Zone": As More of Them Die, Grocery Workers Increasingly Fear Showing Up for Work
https://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/62376-it-feels-like-a-war-zone-as-more-of-them-die-grocery-workers-increasingly-fear-showing-up-at-work

US Farmers Are Destroying Large Amounts of Food They Can No Longer Sell
https://readersupportednews.org/news-section2/318-66/62373-us-farmers-are-destroying-large-amounts-of-food-they-can-no-longer-sell  

Cuomo Seeks to Slash Medicaid Mid-Pandemic
https://youtu.be/Wn1i35Pf03w

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Image
This Earth Day, we're coming together at a scale this movement has never seen before.
As the world is reeling from the COVID-19 crisis, billionaire oil and gas CEOs are using this pandemic to push through whatever taxpayer-funded handouts they can get while the world isn’t looking.

This year, Earth Day will be anything but normal, but that won’t stop us. From April 22 - 24, we will come together online — via a virtual livestream — to rise up in solidarity for those fighting on the frontlines of the COVID-19 and climate crises.

COVID-19 has shone a light on the cracks in our current political and economic systems where the wealthy are put first and people are put last. While millions of people struggle to afford healthcare costs and bills, oil billionaires have been pushing for an oil bailout. This is despicable. What's worse, despite isolation measures, pipeline construction across the U.S. and Canada is still happening. TC Energy, formerly TransCanada, is currently sending workers to build the Coastal GasLink pipeline on Wet'suwet'en land without consent, putting Indigenous elders at a higher risk of getting COVID-19 because they don’t have easy access to healthcare. In the U.S., construction of TC Energy’s Keystone XL pipeline is now underway too despite widespread opposition to the project. 

Like the pandemic, the climate crisis is an issue multiplier, exacerbating these existing inequities. That's why we're coming together online at a scale the climate movement has never seen before.

Will you join us in taking bold action for justice this Earth Day? Here’s 3 things you can do right now:


This year’s 72-hour Earth Day Live mobilization will bring lessons learned for the climate movement from the COVID-19 crisis to a huge national stage. You’ll hear from people on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic, and will be part of creating a vision for how we can come out of the current crisis with a more just world. Sign up to join the Earth Day Live livestream. 

At a time when many of us are stuck at home and are struggling with the public health and economic fallout of this crisis, creative resistance is more essential than ever. Not just to build our movement, but to connect with ourselves and each other more deeply. Join Greenpeace and community artists for an Online Arts Build this Thursday, April 16, to learn how to use your window or yard as a platform for creative resistance on Earth Day. 

We’ll also be taking action in solidarity with the Wet’suwet’en people, whose lives and land lie at the crosshairs of the COVID-19 crisis. Help us fight for Indigenous sovereignty and climate justice — RSVP to our April 23 digital blockade to stop Wall Street investment firm, KKR, from exploiting the COVID-19 crisis and sacrificing Indigenous lives and lands for their own profit.

The COVID-19 crisis marks a turning point. We can choose to go back to a broken status quo, or we can choose to protect working people and frontline communities from this crisis and the climate emergency, not just a wealthy few. We can’t sit this one out.


To a more just future,
Avery Raines
Digital Strategist, Greenpeace USA
***
 
EPA gives green light to polluters. take action (image of pipe spewing dirty water)
Take Action Now
The Environmental Protection Agency has suspended its job of protecting the environment. 
In late March, the agency issued a memo essentially giving companies a pass on polluting, stating that it will not “seek penalties for noncompliance with routine monitoring and reporting obligations” if companies can cite the coronavirus as a reason for violating environmental laws. 
This uses COVID-19 as an excuse to allow polluters to stop following environmental rules set in place to protect human and environmental health. 
This new policy is “temporary,” but there is no end date set. Oil, gas, and other polluting industries have capitalized on the coronavirus crisis and lobbied for more lax rules on air and water pollution. It’s unlikely that the same industries lobbying for regulatory rollbacks will voluntarily comply with the rules that protect our health.  
If anything, pollution rules should be stricter, since a recent study found that fatality rates of coronavirus patients are higher in areas with high levels of air pollution. 
And the pains of pollution are not felt evenly, as frontline communities have long been targeted and burdened by polluting industries. Black and Latinx communities, where people are more likely to have underlying conditions stemming from pollution, are particularly hard hit by the virus. 
People should not be subjected to worsening air and water quality that weakens their health during a pandemic. We need stronger safeguards from pollution – not an abandonment by the entity charged to protect us. 
For people and the planet, 
Beth Porter
Climate Campaigns Director
Green America 



***


$2000/month to every American #moneyforthepeople #covid19
825,109 have signed Stephanie Bonin’s petition. Let’s get to 1,000,000!

My name is Stephanie, and I am one of millions of Americans who fear for my financial future because of this coronavirus crisis. With businesses and schools closing across the country to control the spread of this virus, many people have already lost their jobs. Others are being forced to stay home.

This is catastrophic for working families like mine. 
I’m calling on Congress to support families with a $2,000 payment for adults and a $1,000 payment for kids immediately, and continuing regular checks for the duration of the crisis. Otherwise, laid-off workers, furloughed workers, the self-employed, and workers dealing with reduced hours will struggle to pay their rent or put food on the table.

My husband and I own a restaurant in Denver and these past two weeks have been a blur. Our restaurant community is wrestling with seeing everything we all have worked so hard for irrevocably changed. Our hearts were breaking as we watched our staff divide the ingredients in our kitchen to bring to their homes: a dismal token for employees who worked tirelessly every day. Our talented and cherished team, some of whom have been with us since we opened our doors 15 years ago, are now without an income. Like our team, my family has lost all of the income from our restaurant, and business owners and the self-employed can’t claim unemployment. This is the story of America right now.

For our team and other Americans who can claim unemployment, even the maximum payments will not be enough for most people to continue paying their bills – and avoid slipping into poverty. The facts are, even successful small businesses can’t go months with their doors closed. 
But supplying Americans with monthly support until they can get back on their feet can save our communities from financial ruin.

We need immediate checks and recurring payments so that we can keep our heads above water.  Congress needs to make sure that we won’t be left financially ruined for doing our part to keep the country healthy.


Tuesday, November 26, 2019

Noblesse Oblige



Happy Thanksgiving! 

However you might celebrate it, this is the time of year when many Americans express their gratitude toward others who have helped them (or have at least been kind to them) in the previous year. But what is it about Western society that thinks one day a year is sufficient enough to say "thank you" to our fellow human beings? How can one big meal make up for the centuries of exploitation that colonialism brought to the Americas? And why do we think that a little bit of showy philanthropy offered by a billionaire will right all the wrongs this individual has wreaked upon both people and the planet? 

Our guest blogger considers this age-old concept, that somehow our "betters" will take care of us all...free of charge? You'd be surprised how common this bizarre belief still is in the 21th century.

Noblesse Oblige
by Coast Watcher


In French, noblesse oblige (No-bless OBlee-je) means literally "nobility obligates." It refers to the social contract whereby those of high rank, birth or wealth are supposed to act generously and honorably to others, especially those of lower status and/or wealth.

The phrase has its roots in the feudal system that originated in Carolingian France of the 8th century. It spread to dominate the whole continent of Europe within the next three hundred years. Something akin to feudalism existed at times in ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome, but in any case it basically refers to the need of the weak and innocent for the protection of a powerful man. The powerful—read, nobility—would allow those of lower class to live on their land in exchange for providing general labor or military service. In time the structure of feudalism became rigid, with little scope for mobility between classes.


Feudalism began a slow decline in the 14th century when the Black Death struck Eurasia and Europe. One of the most devastating pandemics in human history, the true death toll is unknown. Estimates vary, but somewhere between 75 to 200 million people died during the plague, which peaked in Europe from 1347 to 1351. The sudden scarcity of those who would labor or fight for the nobility—usually under threat of dire punishment if they defaulted on their obligations—resulted in a radical shift in favor of the lower classes. Without a military to back them up the nobility found themselves powerless in the face of demands for social reforms from the lower classes. 

The increasingly centralized power of monarchy also diminished the nobility’s scope to rule those beneath them. In time this led to a redistribution of wealth, and the middle class, or bourgeoisie, rose to occupy the ground between peasant and noble. Richer than a peasant, not as rich as a noble, the bourgeoisie lived comfortable lives and often worked in trade and industry. As a class they tended to be conservative. They also took on some aspects of noblesse oblige to those less fortunate.


So much for the history. What of the modern world?

It’s said that capitalism arose when democracy met feudalism, and I believe there’s an element of truth in that. Some members of the bourgeoisie who did well in the fields of trade and industry became wealthier than the nobility, often by a huge margin. Their enterprises grew into the multinational corporations we see today. Each and every one of those corporations had its origins in somebody’s store, shed, barn or laboratory. Over the course of decades, and perhaps centuries, those businesses merged or predated upon one another to become vast, bloated operations too powerful for the public’s good. They grew wealthy and powerful enough to control governments.

Quo plus habent, eo plus desire ~ The more they have, the more they want.

Capitalism is a greedy and demanding cuckoo in the nest of humanity. The more it feeds off the public in the shape of tax concessions and subsidies, the more it wants. It loves it when conservative-oriented governments privatize public assets and sell them to the highest bidder. Often capitalism doesn’t have to use force—just wads of lobbyist cash. The more money capitalism takes from the economy, the more ordinary people have to struggle to keep their heads above water. Money which would otherwise be in circulation is being stashed away in offshore accounts where its sole purpose is to provide purchasing power for big business’ next venture.

When poverty increases, there’s a commensurate increased need for charity to step in where government either fails to do so adequately or otherwise ignores the problem. In 1929 the Great Depression began with the infamous Wall Street Crash, lasting well into the thirties. Charities that normally provided a stop-gap solution to immediate problems found themselves having to sustain an impoverished population for far longer than funds would permit. The situation was eased by FDR’s New Deal, which provided public funds to get industry back on its feet and the public back to work.

Of course, the New Deal really came about because the establishment was scared to death by the rise of socialism and communism, both of which are anathema to capitalism. It wanted all the anger and outrage generated by the Great Depression channeled into safer courses. Once the heat had gone out of the situation, those liberal policies gradually went away or were watered down. The 1960s resurgence of public pressure for social reforms was another scary period for the establishment, but again, come the Reagan era, the reforms wrung from government dissipated over time.

And so it is today. The 2008 crash saw poverty hit America once more. Barack Obama bailed out the banks claiming they were “too big to fail” instead of letting them perish for blatant mismanagement of their assets—this after the CEOs of those big banks flew their executive jets into Washington DC so they could plead poverty. The mortgage crisis hit millions across the country. Homelessness rose and has continued to rise. Bankruptcies—especially from unforeseen healthcare costs—are endemic. Charities are stepping into the breach once more, as they did during the Great Depression, and again these charities are struggling to cope with a high demand for their services.

What makes this situation all the uglier for those suffering economic hardship is the attitude of those more fortunate.

Noblesse oblige is noticeably absent. A callous streak infects the rich and generally better off. A pseudo-Calvanistic attitude prevails, whereby many of those more fortunate than others believe the poor and suffering deserve their fate because “God ordains it so.” They use it as justification for doing nothing. Some donate to charitable causes as a sop to their consciences, but they’d rather not have any direct contact with the poor. Another justification to deny charity is that people will become too dependent on charitable donations, and to a certain extent this is true. Much as feudalism created a serf class dependent on the nobility’s largess, so does charity become a crutch which is hard to discard even in better times. 

Even so, governments use the same philosophy to refuse assistance for the sick and struggling even though—especially in the case of the United States Constitution—it has a legal obligation to help.


Big business does indulge in a form of noblesse oblige, usually as a public relations ploy and especially if their business practices draw public and press disapproval. Some businesses such as Amazon are not interested in performing any charitable function. In fact, Amazon owner Jeff Bezos plowed over a million dollars into the recent Seattle council elections specifically to depose Socialist Alternative city councilor Kshama Sawant and pack the council with his toadies. This was after he browbeat the council into abandoning a tiny tax on businesses in the city aimed at providing funds for the homeless. Bezos’ plan failed. Only two of the seven council candidates he sponsored won their seats, and they look set to lose them at the next election.

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is another example of capitalist noblesse oblige. With over $50 billion in assets the foundation’s activities are worldwide and often controversial. It drew criticism for its inoculation program in Africa when it was linked to attempts to sterilize women. Accusations have been leveled at the foundation concerning a hidden agenda.

All things considered, the nobility and rich in general take far more than they give. They rely on charities to take up the considerable slack in helping the poor and disadvantaged in society. It costs the rich far less than a tax on their wealth aimed at providing at least adequate social benefits to citizens. 

Noblesse oblige: At the end of the day, is it worth it? Does it work? Did it ever work? Or is it nothing other than gesture to soothe a rich person’s conscience?


BIO: Coast Watcher stopped believing in Santa Claus and the Easter Bunny as a child. He certainly doesn't believe in the mythical "generous and charitable one-percent class," either. He recommends you open your ears and use your brain to think through what the billionaires are really up to whenever you see them portrayed as heroes in the mainstream media. You do realize they own all the mainstream media outlets, don't you?

This excellent short video poses an important question of morality that needs to be answered for our very survival.  https://youtu.be/axN8ppre-mU

From Bernie Sanders' Twitter Feed: 
The wealth of the billionaire class is almost incomprehensible. The Waltons get $70,000 richer every minute. Jeff Bezos makes $2,489 a second. That is why it is not radical to say that millions of people in this country should not be paid starvation wages.
11:41 AM · Nov 25, 2019


Check out even more damning evidence of how billionaires call the shots worldwide--by starting wars and funding coups to obtain oil and other resources illegally. Excellent piece from Dirk at Beanstock's World. Here's a short excerpt:

"By now, a growing number of Americans have become aware of how our intended democracy has become undermined by Big Money and turned into a sham where voter participation is essentially blocked by a twin party tyranny of the R- and D-Party, both working exclusively for the rich and their corporations, think tanks, and an army of 42,000+ registered lobbyists (plus many more unregistered ones) while dangling billionaire puppets in front of us as “our” candidates, excluding true people’s representatives from our ballots or rigging the elections when one does make it on the ballots."

***
Don't let Wall Street silence activists
Tell SEC commissioners: "Shareholder resolutions are a crucial way for shareholders to hold corporations accountable. Changing SEC Rule 14a-8 would silence shareholder activism and protect big corporations from the consequences of their actions. Withdraw changes to SEC Rule 14a-8."
Add your name:
Sign the petition ►


Don't let Wall Street silence activists
Wall Street is trying to silence the voices of progressive activists, and Trump's handpicked Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) chair is helping.

Shareholder resolutions have forced Fortune 500 corporations to ban discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, promote transparency, improve racial diversity and confront climate change. But now, after lobbying from corporate CEOs, the SEC proposed new rules that make activists jump through increasingly difficult hoops in order to introduce and pass shareholder resolutions.1,2

We can't let the SEC help Wall Street crush the shareholder activists who hold major corporations accountable. We need to speak out against this awful proposal now, while the SEC is still accepting public input.

Tell the SEC: Don't help Wall Street crush activists. Click here to sign the petition.

The SEC is supposed to protect people from Wall Street. It is doing the opposite. In the past, the SEC made sure shareholders – from mom-and-pop investors to the pension funds of teachers and firefighters – can propose and pass resolutions demanding changes from the company they own stock in. But under the leadership of Trump's handpicked SEC chair Jay Clayton, the SEC is helping corporations hide their actions and escape accountability from shareholders. The Sierra Club recently sued the SEC to find out how the watchdog routinely allows corporations to exclude shareholder resolutions that force them to confront climate change.3

Shareholder resolutions are a powerful tool for holding corporations accountable. Many standard practices today – including banning discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, allowing shareholders to hold a vote on excessive CEO pay and banning conflicts of interests among board members – began as shareholder resolutions. And shareholders continue to push corporations to do better on racial and gender diversity, climate change, environmental and labor practices, disclosure of political spending, and far, far more.4

The new SEC proposal would help corporations crack down on these shareholder resolutions by limiting who is eligible to submit new ones and rejecting previous resolutions unless they gain immense popularity over a short period of time. It would even give corporations a say in which resolutions to recommend to shareholders – akin to letting Donald Trump edit the New York Times opinion page.5

Right now, the proposal is open for public comment and the narrowly divided SEC gives us a chance to block the new rules. Trump's SEC chair wants to let Wall Street CEOs write the rules governing who can hold them accountable, and we cannot let that happen.

Tell the SEC: Don't help Wall Street crush activists. Click below to sign the petition:
https://act.credoaction.com/sign/sec-shareholder-resolution?t=9&akid=35055%2E9999572%2EVipUpL

Thank you for speaking out,
Heidi Hess, Co-Director CREDO Action from Working Assets
Add your name:
Sign the petition ►
References:
  1. Ganesh Setty, "Shareholders would have tougher time submitting resolutions under SEC’s proposed rule," CNBC, Nov. 5, 2019.
  2. Lisa Woll, "The SEC wants to change the rules for filing shareholder motions — for no good reason," MarketWatch, Nov. 5, 2019.
  3. Hazel Bradford, "Sierra Club sues SEC over denial of climate-related shareholder resolutions," Pensions & Investments, Oct. 25, 2019.
  4. Woll, "The SEC wants to change the rules for filing shareholder motions — for no good reason."
  5. Ibid.

 ***

 

Surveillance is at the heart of Amazon's monopolistic business model.They record our conversations, capture video footage of our lives, creep into our elections, track our faces, and partner with police to build a nationwide surveillance network. They exploit our intimate moments and sensitive personal information for their profits. 1,2,3
 

Amazon devices don’t make us safer. Their executives recently admitted there are no safeguards in place to protect our data, privacy, or our civil liberties in their Ring doorbell cameras and surveillance police partnerships.4
 

In response to Amazon’s blatant disregard for our basic rights and security, a group of Senators sent letters demanding answers. But now that lawmakers in DC are asking questions, Amazon will dispatch their army of lobbyists and call in their favors with the politicians they helped elect. There’s nothing they won’t do to avoid scrutiny and accountability. 




Amazon is going to continue to expand their surveillance network. They will take advantage of the holiday season to sell more devices that listen to us and watch us. 


We need lawmakers to intervene. A Congressional hearing is the only way to expose Amazon’s invasive data harvesting practices, and lay the foundation for laws that will rein in their for-profit surveillance practices. 


 

Together, we can shutdown Amazon’s surveillance dragnet.

Ayele at Fight for the Future



Footnotes: