It's certainly scummy but legal. The real unethical party is the local governments and politicians who give money to the private company. Crony capitalism at its finest and good proof that neither companies nor government really like a free market.
It's certainly scummy but legal. The real unethical party is the local governments and politicians who give money to the private company. Crony capitalism at its finest and good proof that neither companies nor government really like a free market.
It's not necessarily unethical on Amazon's side, but it's criminally unethical on the city's sides, who were offering up their hard-working citizen's money to subsidize one of the biggest companies in existence.
It's not necessarily unethical on Amazon's side, but it's criminally unethical on the city's sides, who were offering up their hard-working citizen's money to subsidize one of the biggest companies in existence.
Strangely, I don't even see this as unethical, from a business perspective. I probably should, but I don't. It just makes sense. Play the whole field. Like going to several car dealerships and getting quotes for similar cars.