Boycott Amazon Until it Hosts WikiLeaks on Its Servers

Boycott Amazon Until it Hosts WikiLeaks on Its Servers

The Issue

WikiLeaks has exposed official wrongdoing and countless war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, serving as a vital conduit of information the U.S. government has tried to keep hidden from its own citizens -- and which deserves to be free. Yet Amazon.com recently kicked WikiLeaks off its servers all because one politician, Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman, asked. That's not right.

It should come as no surprise that pro-war American politicians dislike WikiLeaks: it has told the truth about their wars. What is surprising and disappointing is that Amazon would cave to pressure from such politicians and shut down a website on its servers without notice -- and without any apparent concern about the role it was playing as a tool of state censorship.

As a private company, Amazon is of course free to make bad decisions. But the public is also free to shop elsewhere, perhaps with companies a little less willing to stifle speech at the behest of the government. Until Amazon agrees to again host WikiLeaks on its servers -- for free -- no one should do business with a company working hand in hand with the state to silence the truth.

Photo Credit: Leticia Gaidon Bradford

avatar of the starter
Charles DavisPetition StarterCharles has reported on topics from the war on drugs to the war on terror, his having aired on NPR and Pacifica stations across the country and been published by outlets including <i>AlterNet</i>, <a href="http://Antiwar.com" rel="nofollow">Antiwar.com</a>, <a href="http://CommonDreams.org" rel="nofollow">CommonDreams.org</a>, <i>Counterpunch</i> and Inter Press Service. He has also enjoyed stints working as a researcher on Michael Moore’s <i>Capitalism: A Love Story</i>, waiting tables at a surprisingly seedy Friendly’s family restaurant (several stints, actually), and mixing and packaging horseradish-based products at a small factory in Pennsylvania. He did not particularly enjoy that last one.
This petition had 1,660 supporters

The Issue

WikiLeaks has exposed official wrongdoing and countless war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, serving as a vital conduit of information the U.S. government has tried to keep hidden from its own citizens -- and which deserves to be free. Yet Amazon.com recently kicked WikiLeaks off its servers all because one politician, Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman, asked. That's not right.

It should come as no surprise that pro-war American politicians dislike WikiLeaks: it has told the truth about their wars. What is surprising and disappointing is that Amazon would cave to pressure from such politicians and shut down a website on its servers without notice -- and without any apparent concern about the role it was playing as a tool of state censorship.

As a private company, Amazon is of course free to make bad decisions. But the public is also free to shop elsewhere, perhaps with companies a little less willing to stifle speech at the behest of the government. Until Amazon agrees to again host WikiLeaks on its servers -- for free -- no one should do business with a company working hand in hand with the state to silence the truth.

Photo Credit: Leticia Gaidon Bradford

avatar of the starter
Charles DavisPetition StarterCharles has reported on topics from the war on drugs to the war on terror, his having aired on NPR and Pacifica stations across the country and been published by outlets including <i>AlterNet</i>, <a href="http://Antiwar.com" rel="nofollow">Antiwar.com</a>, <a href="http://CommonDreams.org" rel="nofollow">CommonDreams.org</a>, <i>Counterpunch</i> and Inter Press Service. He has also enjoyed stints working as a researcher on Michael Moore’s <i>Capitalism: A Love Story</i>, waiting tables at a surprisingly seedy Friendly’s family restaurant (several stints, actually), and mixing and packaging horseradish-based products at a small factory in Pennsylvania. He did not particularly enjoy that last one.

The Decision Makers

Jeff Bezos
Jeff Bezos
CEO
Customer Relations
Customer Relations

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Petition created on December 2, 2010