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  • Didn't know there was so much organic foods to go around. I don't see much of a deal, apart from the apples and avacados. My Wal Mart sells rotisserie chickens for 4.99$ apiece. Of course, they can become a bit crunchy if they sit for hours under heating lamps, but they'll discount further to get rid. I'm not sure what the other mostly-organic stores' prices are.. There's an Aldi and a Lidl next to each other in an adjacent city

  • If more people end up shopping at Whole Foods because it is cheaper less food gets thrown away. That's a plus as I see it. Large Grocers in the US primarily sell processed poisons to kill us all slowly.

  • @bannedindv

    Amazon just will sell premium processed poisons :-) because it is what they do best.

  • AFAIK Amazon and Vodafone are he last two big companies still advertising on Breitbart. I cancelled my Vodafone Wifi today. Amazon is not yet functioning in Australia.

  • @goanna

    And? They must finance them less publically, you mean?

  • I don't know if secret financing can be easily done in America. I simply think that Amazon uses an ad-bot that places ads wherever there's value and return. Other advertisers* have realised it's bad for business and withdrawn.

    https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1i9o8CR_kjJ6mBd44k6CRZEhlXuZqq-XCCOoj-e8RJ7Q/edit#gid=0

    • Vodafone has "whitelisted" Breitbart since the above list was published. (Maybe all the attention got them a great deal) "All publicity is good publicity."
  • @goanna

    Why it is "bad for business"? Make image worse?

  • Yes, it's bad for business. Today, like thousands of customers, I wrote to Vodafone:

    Dear Vodafone, I have been a satisfied customer of yours for mobile internet services for 8 years, currently spending $250.00 every three months or so. However upon hearing that your parent company has finally decided to continue advertising with far right racist and hate speech media company Breitbart, I am writing to give you the opportunity to confirm or deny that this is true. If so I will be regretfully purchasing my prepaid internet services from one of your competitors. Yours Sincerely,

    [edit] just received this reply: Hi, thank you for your e-mail.

    We're sorry to hear you're unhappy with an aspect of our service.

    We will be in touch within 2 business days to discuss how we can help to resolve your complaint.

    Vodafone Customer Care

    (see, they do care!)

  • @goanna

    Let me make to more accessible for readers:

    Dear mister al Capone, I am very satisfied customer of your company and support you for long time. However recently I learned what one of your gang squads not only killed young guy and raped his girl in front of everyone, but during it they also constantly shouted racist stuff. It is unacceptable!

    If you won't replace this gangsters with proper one who will shoot people and don't mess with everything else we are going to ask mister Tomazzino to do something with it, and this means also it'll be his gang shooting wrong guys around.

    Thing you wrote is good sample of petty bourgeoisie logic. As it fails to understand cleaning capitalists began on right wing sector is not made to protect you, they just clear competitors as whole capitalist states are moving in this direction.

  • I did already. Got a cheaper, better ISP and enjoying the ride as Breitbart looks for private investors. It's bad enough they exist at all - I get to spend my own cash as I wish.

  • It's bad enough they exist at all - I get to spend my own cash as I wish.

    They will exist, and as I said you soon will see your whole state in their place.

  • Amazon today announced plans to open Amazon HQ2, a second company headquarters in North America. Amazon expects to invest over $5 billion in construction and grow this second headquarters to include as many as 50,000 high-paying jobs. In addition to Amazon’s direct hiring and investment, construction and ongoing operation of Amazon HQ2 is expected to create tens of thousands of additional jobs and tens of billions of dollars in additional investment in the surrounding community. Amazon is opening the Amazon HQ2 Request for Proposal (“RFP”) now, and local and state government leaders interested in learning more about how they can bring Amazon to their community can visit www.amazon.com/amazonHQ2.

    Amazon estimates its investments in Seattle from 2010 through 2016 resulted in an additional $38 billion to the city’s economy – every dollar invested by Amazon in Seattle generated an additional 1.4 dollars for the city’s economy overall.

  • Thousands of Amazon employees went on strike in Germany over a long-standing wage dispute, German media reported on Monday.

    According to the trade union Ver.di, around 2,000 people stayed away from work at six Amazon locations across the country. Amazon operates a total of nine logistics centers in Germany.

    Ver.di representative Thomas Voss said that Amazon had recently raised wages slightly, but the increases remained "significantly below" industry standards and trade union demands.

    Trade unionists are urging Amazon to pay its staff in accordance with the collective wage agreement for the German shipment and retail industry. The U.S. technology giant has failed to mirror pay-rises recently agreed in the sector.

  • Bad week for Amazon in EU

    Amazon.com Inc. was slapped with a European Union order to pay 250 million euros ($294 million) plus interest in back taxes to Luxembourg as the world’s biggest online retailer became the latest U.S. giant to run afoul of the bloc’s tough rules on government subsidies.

  • @goanna I just checked Breitbart's website, looking through many headlines and a couple articles. Where is the racism and hatred? I just see standard news stuff.

  • @joethepro I just checked their front page - the vast majority of the articles have been clearly cherry picked to make minorities appear bad/dangerous. If you can't see a racist bias in that, then perhaps you are their target audience.

  • @eatstoomuchjam

    @joethepro

    I think best is to make other topic, it has nothing to do with this.

  • Amazon is in the final stages of figuring out its strategy to get into the multibillion-dollar prescription drug market.

    The company will decide before Thanksgiving whether to move into selling prescription drugs online, according to an email from Amazon and a source familiar with the situation. If it decides to make that move, it will start expanding its senior team with drug supply chain experts.

  • The deadline to submit proposals for Amazon.com Inc.’s second headquarters, dubbed HQ2, has arrived, and about 100 cities are expected to compete for the project. Amazon’s preferences for HQ2, which will cost more than $5 billion and create 50,000 jobs over the next two decades

    New Jersey proposed $7 billion in potential credits against state and city taxes if Amazon locates in Newark and sticks to hiring commitments, according to a Monday news release from the governor’s office.

    New York City made a proposal without incentives special for Amazon, though the state is expected to offer some, a spokesman for the city’s economic development corporation said on Wednesday.

    California is offering some $300 million in incentives over several years and other benefits, the governor said in an Oct. 11 letter to Amazon’s Chief Executive Jeff Bezos, published online by the Orange County Register. Amazon

    Atlanta: The southern U.S. city, home of Amazon delivery partner United Parcel Service Inc., is a major flight hub, and the greater metro area houses a dynamic population of almost 6 million, as well as the headquarters of major corporations like Coca-Cola Co. and Home Depot Inc. Still, Atlanta is a relatively suburban city, compared with the urban HQ1 of Seattle.

    Boston: Several Amazon executives have already advocated putting HQ2 in Boston, due to its proximity to Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology; an airport with nonstop flights to Seattle and Washington D.C.; and a lower cost of living than some other large urban areas. Amazon has ties with Boston already, having purchased local robot maker Kiva Systems Inc. for $775 million in 2012. The city also won General Electric Co.’s 2015 new headquarters bid, and has provided more than $100 million in grants, property tax relief and programs for GE – though the city has said it won’t negotiate any incentives with Amazon until Boston makes it past the first round of the selection process.

    Chicago: The Windy City ranks second in Anderson Economic Group’s analysis of 35 cities competing for the precious HQ2, focusing on its talent, diverse ecosystem and access to transportation in its bid. Just last month, Illinois Governor Bruce Rauner reauthorized the Economic Development for a Growing Economy (EDGE) tax-credit program, which provides special tax incentives to companies relocating to Illinois or expanding operations in the state when another state is actively competing, according to BNA. One issue? The city isn’t known as a center of technology.

    Toronto: Canada’s biggest city is already home to 800 Amazon employees and boasts a large population of computer science, engineering and artificial intelligence graduates and programs. Municipalities in the Toronto region have teamed up to increase their chances at scoring Amazon’s HQ2, and Ontario just announced a plan to boost STEM graduates, saying that it can offer talent at 30 percent less than other big tech jurisdictions. Yet going to Canada holds political risks: Moving integral operations and workforce from the U.S. may step up tension with President Donald Trump.

    Washington: The U.S. capital city’s urban location, highly educated workforce and public transportation are top selling points for its HQ2 bid. Not to mention Jeff Bezos already has a strong presence there: the Amazon founder owns the Washington Post, and last year purchased the largest home in the city. Washington didn’t disclose what it may offer Amazon in financial incentives, but the district has been active in providing taxpayer dollars to corporations in the past, according to the Post. Cons include the city’s expensive housing market and limited space for building

    The dark side clouds everything.

  • Amazon noted an uptick in net sales of 34 percent to $43.7 billion in the third quarter.

    Amazon’s profit decreased 40 percent to $347 million, compared to $575 million the year prior, as a result of an increase in operating expenses. The net cash that Amazon is pouring into investments has nearly quadrupled year over year.

    Amazon’s operating at a loss in international markets is $2.1 billion .

  • All this is scary.

  • Liabilities (Quarterly), bottom is total

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  • Amazon has received licenses to become a wholesale drug distributor in at least 12 states. Nevada, Arizona, North Dakota, Louisiana, Alabama, New Jersey, Michigan, Connecticut, Idaho, New Hampshire, Oregon and Tennessee have already approved the company's application, whereas Maine is still thinking about it.

  • Whole topic in one video