Illustration: Nick Sheeran

If Jeff Bezos Was Smart, He’d Get Ahead of the Worker Revolution

Instead of trying to colonize space, Jeff Bezos could reward workers on the pandemic’s front lines

Rob Walker
Marker
Published in
8 min readApr 7, 2020

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InIn a job market defined by swift and merciless brutality, the delivery economy right now offers something resembling a rare bright spot. Amazon, for example, announced it is hiring 100,000 workers to bolster its everything-to-your-door infrastructure. And Instacart, specializing in grocery home-deliveries in thousands of U.S. cities, said it wants to bring on 300,000 more (contract) “shoppers.” It’s easy to understand this niche labor demand: In the Covid-19 era, people are being urged to avoid the store and have their food delivered.

But instead of enjoying a wave of huzzahs for announcing hiring sprees, Amazon and Instacart and others have been greeted with strikes and walkouts by delivery-infrastructure workers who feel underpaid and endangered. The actions captured tons of press attentionglaringly spotlighting the concerns, fears, and challenges facing a category of worker that’s become increasingly vital. And that has also become increasingly vulnerable and exposed to health risks.

They could get ahead of the revolution with bold gestures that reframe the entire…

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