Amazon Employees Detail Inhumane Working Conditions On Bezos’ Human Chessboard
MIAMI—In an official filing with the U.S. Department of Labor, Amazon employees alleged Monday that they had been exposed to inhumane working conditions while staffing the human chessboard that executive chairman Jeff Bezos maintains on the grounds of his Florida compound. “We’re not allowed to take breaks of any kind,” one Amazon worker said on the [...] The post Amazon Employees Detail Inhumane Working Conditions On Bezos’ Human Chessboard appeared first on The Onion .
MIAMI—In an official filing with the U.S. Department of Labor, Amazon employees alleged Monday that they had been exposed to inhumane working conditions while staffing the human chessboard that executive chairman Jeff Bezos maintains on the grounds of his Florida compound. “We’re not allowed to take breaks of any kind,” one Amazon worker said on the condition of anonymity, claiming that human chess pieces are expected to stand motionless for more than eight hours at a time on the board’s three-by-three-foot squares and cannot move until Bezos or his opponent orders them to. …
Opening excerpt. Read the full story at Newsdata · Florida Politics ↗
Sourced from Newsdata · Florida Politics · indexed by Statura on June 10, 2026. Statura indexes Florida political news and tags it by industry and jurisdiction so government-affairs teams can monitor signal without scanning every outlet by hand. Read the full story at Newsdata · Florida Politics ↗
More like this
- Florida Politics · June 10, 2026Attendee at candidate summit refutes Elijah Manley’s account of candidate conversation
- FlaglerLive · June 10, 2026Soccer or Football? Don’t Let Snobbery Be the Answer.
- Florida Politics · June 10, 2026Paul Renner barely clears six-figures in two months of fundraising amid heavy burn rate
- FlaglerLive · June 10, 2026David Jolly Announces Gwen Graham as Gubernatorial Running Mate
- Tampa Bay Times · June 10, 2026St. Petersburg’s ‘Inclusive Family and Faith’ proclamation draws scrutiny
- Tampa Bay Times · June 10, 2026Florida Supreme Court keeps new congressional maps in place for 2026 elections
