"This Labor Day, let's stop subsidizing low-paying billionaires" Let's Help Bernie Sanders Please!
Things won't change if WE don't insist on change
Remember when Labor day meant Bar b Que at the park... Please help us change things!
Read First-Sign Petition Here:
https://act.credoaction.com/sign/sanders_amazon?t=3&akid=29879%2E5734876%2E-HSn0q
"Petition to Congress:
"Stop subsidizing billionaires like Jeff Bezos and the Walton family. Support Sen. Sanders' new bill to force big employers to either pay a living wage or be taxed the cost of the public assistance their underpaid workers must rely upon to survive. "
This Labor Day, let's stop subsidizing low-paying billionaires
Donald Trump routinely tweets about Amazon and its billionaire founder, Jeff Bezos, but the company stays silent.
But when Sen. Bernie Sanders criticized the company for its poor wages and dangerous working conditions, the company issued a rare statement in response.1
Sen. Sanders angered company executives by pointing out that Amazon, like other big employers, pays so little that many workers turn to public assistance to survive. But he isn't just critiquing their practices, he is trying to end them.2
This Labor Day, as we celebrate the achievements of America's labor movement, Sen. Sanders' proposal to force companies to pay a living wage deserves our full-throated support.
Stand with Sen. Sanders: Stop subsidizing low-paying billionaires.
Amazon made $3.03 billion last year and Bezos saw his personal wealth increase from $99 to $157 billion. The company is so profitable because it shortchanges suppliers, uses its massive market monopoly power to undercut entire industries and local businesses, and pays its workers so little. Meanwhile, taxpayers essentially subsidize low-wage employers like Amazon with $150 billion each year in public benefits for their low-income workers.3
In order to survive and take care of their families, between 1 in 3 and 1 in 10 Amazon employees, depending on the state, must turn to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), commonly referred to as food stamps. Some employees unfairly designated as "contractors" may earn even less. On top of it all, Amazon warehouses rank among the most dangerous and a number of workers have died on the job. The situation is similar for workers at Walmart and most of America's biggest and most profitable employers.4
Sen. Sanders' idea is simple: Either these billionaire companies start paying their workers a living wage – or the government will tax them the exact cost of taking care of their employees. So if a worker would starve or lose housing without that $500 per month in help from the American people, Amazon must pay $500. That's a pro-worker proposal that needs our support this Labor Day.
Stand with Sen. Sanders: Stop subsidizing low-paying billionaires.
Labor Day wasn’t always associated with cookouts and end-of-summer sales. Before it was hijacked by brands like Walmart, it celebrated “what workers accomplish together through activism and organizing.” Instead of a pleasant day off, Labor Day during the first years of its existence was marked by massive strikes and speakers denouncing inequality.5
We at CREDO will always stand in solidarity with our sisters and brothers in the labor movement. Right now, one way we can do that is by ending the subsidies that help businesses make billions while they refuse to pay their workers a living wage."
"Thank you for speaking out."
Sign Petition Here:
https://act.credoaction.com/sign/sanders_amazon?t=3&akid=29879%2E5734876%2E-HSn0q
"References:
1.Abha Bhattarai, "Bernie vs. Bezos: Amazon and Sanders are duking it out over warehouse working conditions," The Washington Post, Aug. 29, 2018.
2.Abha Bhattarai, "Thousands of Amazon workers receive food stamps. Now Bernie Sanders wants the company to pay up." The Washington Post, Aug. 23, 2018
3.Ibid
4.Chad Broughton, “When Labor Day Meant Something,” The Atlantic, September 1, 2014"