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Jul 2021

As someone working for a small online retailer, I will not shop from amazon, since they would love to put me out of a job. They have a predatory practice of inviting retailers to sell via amazon (they asked us, we declined) then once they have the data on what sells best for that brand, they make their own cheaper version and drive the smaller company out of business.

I also can't be okay with anybody hoarding that much wealth while poor people continue to suffer and die from lack of access to basic necessities. There will always be someone in the comments ready to step up and defend the billionaires, as if anybody can actually earn that much money without exploiting other people, but nobody needs that much money, and hoarding it is actively causing suffering.

For anyone wondering just how much money is a lot of money. Here is a good website to put in perspective the wealth of billionaires and Jeff Bezos

You find them altruistic? How? Musk, Bezos, etc all look like megalomaniacs to me... But perhaps it's just me?

To people who don't think past the mainstream news headlines, I'd say yes, they appear that way.

That's fair... (Looking at you and your memes, Elon). But yeah, it certainly feels like PR moves more than genuine engagement so perhaps that's why it may not work on everyone.

Yea this is accurate. Far too many people are praising Bezos for being the pioneer of future space travel now, but in reality he's probably just trying to become Space Lord Bezos.

...Think I'm gonna have to get some space pirates on this guy's ass :laughing:

Every day people like him wake up and go "we're going to perpetuate the hell world we're in, make it worse, and have so much money we couldn't possibly spend it in five lifetimes".

So, it would've been nice if he didn't come back from space, ever? Maybe the other people up top could've gone and stayed too.

Also, it's already a big thread on twitter, no one willingly stayed on space for more than a year so far - zero g, muscle problems, radiation, it's all still there in the best parts of the current space stations. If it's horrible for people who trained their whole lives to become astronauts, no, rich guy who never had a problem in his life isn't actually going to live to see a colony he'd want to stay in.

I find it such a waste of resources that he went to space for three minutes. We all have to reduce our emissions, yet here he is shooting another rocket in the sky. (other parties are guilty of that too, it is not just Bezos in this case)

Yup! And claiming it's all for the advancement of humanity or some shit, but on the matters of surviving until we actually get results, nah, quarterly reports are more important.

That hoarding of money is actually damaging to the economy too. If only a few people have a lot of money, they're never going to spend it a lot (or maybe on stuff like Bitcoin and real estate). If you give that money to lots of poor people, they're going to buy furniture, cars, food, pillows etc, generating way more business.

To be fair, I don't think anyone who has that much money will ever consider donating to NASA instead of going to space themselves. With that age and money, even the most humble and kind of people would much rather fulfil their selfish desires while giving their money to their own agencies. Blue Origin was founded back in 2000, it makes much more sense for him to invest in that himself.

On a completely different note, these simple space trips have pushed all big countries into a space race. There was no way they would work together anyway. So if they can consider finally investing in space technology by competing with each other, it's probably a winning scenario.

This is not my opinion on Bezos, of course. There were much better ways to spend the same amount of money by sending real astronauts and conducting research. No one needs nor deserves that much money.

Also I want to add that people with that amount of money can buy anyone or anything. Politicians, CEOs, other companies (squash out their competition), law suits, police, military, land etc.

Absolutely brilliant post. You really summed up the absurd injustice of it.

He could easily make changes to ensure his workers are well treated. It's the bare minimum expected of a decent person, wealth aside. But he hasn't. I don't think he cares.

Bezos? I think he should grow some hair. Rich people in space? It's an ego trip.

Must be nice to have money.

Can you imagine me trying to conquer space? I'm sitting there in my cardboard box; I strike a match to the bottom.

"Oh! Excuse me. Looks like I landed before I took off."

About Amazon. I have a book on Amazon, but I guess it's on a back shelf. I Have an Amazon account, but I haven't ordered anything yet. I am dubious about ordering on the internet and having boxes stolen from my front porch. They got some cool stuff, though.

With an extremely rare exception (if I need something for my disability and cannot find it for sale anywhere else), I do not shop at Amazon. As for Bezos and his vision, well...

... I can easily name a few other people with "visions". Many of them carried out genocides, ethnic cleansings, and started local and global wars that lead to the suffering of hundreds of thousands to millions of people. It's just, under capitalist ideals, the kind of suffering Bezos and his ilk inflict on other people is "acceptable" and therefore we "cannot hate them". Yeah, screw that. If your vision involves the suffering of others who are just trying to live their lives in peace, you can go on a one-way trip to space with no space suit.

Answering a question with a question: Why am I obligated to care about an individual, and by extension a collection of individuals, who couldn't care less if I dropped dead yesterday?

Even in the amiable facades they put up their personal views are pretty clear if you know how to interpret the things they say. Discernment doesn't exist for no reason at all, it's just a mater of how fine tuned your perception skills are.