What about your workers? Amazon’s Bezos gets grief for $2bn fund to help homeless & children
Amazon CEO and world’s richest man Jeff Bezos has invoked Twitter wrath for seemingly an all-around commendable cause – setting up a charity fund to fight homelessness and create a preschool network for the underprivileged.
The so-called Day One Fund will be multi-billionaire businessman’s most significant foray into philanthropy to date. The 2$ billion pledged by Bezos will be used to finance two separate funds to be created. The first one, “The Day 1 Families Fund” will provide grants to organizations and groups that help accommodate homeless families, while “The Day 1 Academies Fund” will run a network of Montessori-based nurseries in impoverished communities. Bezos was previously criticized for giving relatively little to charity.
— Jeff Bezos (@JeffBezos) September 13, 2018
Many on Twitter, however, did not hurry to heap praise on Bezos’ new endeavor, pointing out Amazon’s practices of underpaying its workers and forcing employees to work in stuffy warehouses without air conditioning.
It’d be way better if he’d commit to paying taxes in the first place. Or commit to providing a decent work environment. Or commit to not building a business model that priced out and destroyed mom and pop bookstores just to gather data.Dude sucks and so does his “commitment.”
— Night Musk (@BathroomCologne) September 13, 2018
Some resorted to the same argument as US President Donald Trump, who has attacked Amazon for not paying enough taxes and using US postal office as its “delivery boy.”
I am right about Amazon costing the United States Post Office massive amounts of money for being their Delivery Boy. Amazon should pay these costs (plus) and not have them bourne by the American Taxpayer. Many billions of dollars. P.O. leaders don’t have a clue (or do they?)!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) April 3, 2018
Senator Bernie Sanders, who has been one of Amazon’s most vocal critics, last week introduced the Stop BEZOS Act, aimed at placing a tax on big companies like Amazon and Walmart so they compensate the government for the benefits it has to pay their low-income employees.
“That’s what a rigged economy is about,” Sanders said, as he introduced the bill.
Many Twitter users agreed with that reasoning. “If billionaires like Bezos were properly taxed then we wouldn't need billionaires like Bezos to sweep in and ‘rescue’ people failed by our underfunded systems,” one wrote.
If billionaires like Bezos were properly taxed then we wouldn't need billionaires like Bezos to sweep in and "rescue" people failed by our underfunded systems.
— Rebecca ''Abolish ICE'' Cohen (@GynoStar) September 13, 2018
Jeff Bezos pledged $2 billion to a new "philanthropic fund."Amazon owes that and more in taxes they avoided! 😡💰 Amazon holds BILLIONS in untaxed subsidiaries overseas.💰 Amazon spent millions lobbying for tax reform.💰 Amazon has received $1 BILLION in local tax breaks. pic.twitter.com/IpiW6oRi3X
— Bonnie Castillo (@NNUBonnie) September 13, 2018
Another brought up the fact that Amazon strong-armed the Seattle city council to abandon the plan to tax the company in order to raise funds for tackling the mounting homelessness crisis.
Bezos (worth $160+b) will fund homeless charity with donations he can deduct from his taxes after forcing Seattle to repeal a tax on his company that would have funded help for homeless. Seattle, meet your feudal lord. https://t.co/RiZnC7yWxn
— Paul Blumenthal d/b/a James McMorgans LLC (@PaulBlu) September 13, 2018
Seattle, where Amazon has its headquarters, has been plagued by the rising number of homeless residents for the past several years. Currently more than half of the homeless population in the King County are sleeping rough on the streets, due to the lack of shelters.
How deep are #Bezos’ pockets compared to average #Amazon employees? https://t.co/EE6rwUmTe3
— RT (@RT_com) September 9, 2018
The Seattle City Council unanimously backed the proposed business tax, dubbed ‘Amazon Tax’, in May, only to back down a month later after Amazon halted the construction planning for a new high-rise in the city. The project cancellation could have potentially robbed the city of 7,000 new jobs.
While the online retail giant’s presence made Seattle the fastest-growing big city in the US, it also has taken a toll on its residents, driving up rent prices, clogging traffic and overwhelming public transportation.
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