I canceled my Amazon Prime membership. You can, too.

It's time to say goodbye to Prime.
By Keith Wagstaff  on 
plants and a box with money
I'm tired of giving Amazon my money. Credit: Zlata Ivleva / Shutterstock

You can quit Amazon Prime.

I did it in 2020, in response to Amazon firing user experience designers Emily Cunningham and Maren Costa. They were protesting the company's firing of warehouse workers who were themselves protesting for better working conditions.

The coronavirus pandemic hit "essential workers" hardest, a category that includes doctors and the workers who pack and deliver your online purchases. Some of those workers went on strike, demanding hazard pay, adequate sick leave, protective gear, and transparency about the number of coronavirus cases in each Amazon warehouse.

In response to the safety issues raised during the protests, an Amazon spokesperson pointed to the company's plans to spend more than $800 million in the first half of 2020 on masks, hand sanitizer, thermometers, COVID-19 testing supplies, and other items. In addition, some team members were to be reassigned to new safety-related roles.

"The fact is that today the overwhelming majority of our more than 840,000 employees around the world are at work as usual continuing to support getting people in their communities the items they need during these challenging times. While there is tremendous media coverage of today’s protests we see no measurable impact on operations. Health and safety is our top priority," Amazon spokesperson Timothy Carter wrote in an email to Mashable.

Around the same time Amazon fired the workers who spoke up, the Wall Street Journal reported that the company has been using data from other retailers to launch competing products — something it testified to the House that it didn't do. Amazon has launched an internal investigation and takes the allegations seriously, Carter said.

Imagine a future where the only retailer is Amazon selling its own branded products, and you'll understand why this isn't sitting well with Sen. Elizabeth Warren and other progressive politicians.

Fed up, Amazon workers on Staten ISland finally voted to form the company's first union in 2022 despite the company's attempts to stop it.

So, back to Prime.

In 2014, the year I joined the subscription service, I barely bought anything on the site. But after you fork over that membership fee, currently $139, it becomes easier and easier to justify buying everything on Amazon. As time goes by, you forget about the fee and start to take two-day shipping for granted.

Imagine a future where the only retailer is Amazon selling its own branded products.

"Well, I'm buying a book. I might as well add some laundry detergent. Oh yeah, and I need a vacuum cleaner. Oh, those shoes look nice..."

But over the last few years, major brands have stopped playing Amazon's game. Nike pulled its products from the site. So did Birkenstock and PopSockets. In fact, many of my favorite brands don't sell their products on Amazon. Third-party retailers sell some of them on Amazon Marketplace, which has become a kind of Wild West of unvetted sellers and product reviews.

Meanwhile, other retailers have started offering free, fast shipping, too. (Although, it's worth reconsidering if you really need that T-shirt in two days' time.) Fast, free shipping isn't free of environmental costs, though. As an MIT professor told Bloomberg about two-day shipping: "If you are willing to wait a week, it's like killing just 20 trees instead of 100 trees." Amazon may have pledged to be carbon neutral by 2040, but it's still tough to recycle some of its shipping containers.

And Amazon isn't the only place to buy books online anymore. Local bookstores are still an option — something I've always tried to support. But that became harder once the pandemic hit. Many bookstores are still fulfilling orders online and if you can wait a bit longer, it's best to buy from them directly. Bookshop.org is a new Amazon alternative that gives a large cut of its profits to independent bookstores.

Look, I get it. Amazon Prime is convenient. You have everything in one place and shipping is free. But here's the problem: It's a yoke that not only disincentivizes you from shopping around for better products (sometimes at lower prices) but also encourages you to buy the stuff you might not need.

If you're going to make an impulse purchase, you might as well support a plethora of businesses, instead of making Jeff Bezos even richer (the pandemic actually increased his fortune by $86 billion.) Amazon owns nearly 40 percent of the e-commerce market right now. The coronavirus is going to wipe out many small businesses. Even large retailers like Neiman Marcus went bankrupt.

When the dust settles, I don't want there to be only one or two companies left standing. I certainly don't want my only option to be a retail empire that aggressively fights unions and helps companies extract fossil fuels more efficiently.

At first, I was only curious about quitting Prime. So, on April 20, I signed into my account settings to see when my Prime membership would end. To my surprise, it was set to expire that exact day, with my membership poised to automatically renew the next day.

I resented not being warned I was about to hand Bezos another $139. (Amazon makes you opt-in for Prime payment reminders rather than making them automatic.) I was finding stuff I wanted to order elsewhere. And I was scared of how Amazon was taking over the economy.

So it made sense to quit Amazon Prime. And even in quarantine, I don't regret it a bit.

Amazon Prime Day this year will take place Tuesday, July 12, and Wednesday, July 13.

UPDATE: Jun. 16, 2022, 12:45 p.m. EDT This post has been updated to include additional information. This post was originally published on May 1, 2020, and was republished on June 16, 2022.

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UPDATE: May. 1, 2020, 12:44 p.m. EDT UPDATE: May 1, 2020, 6:17 p.m. PDT: This post has been updated to include comments provided by Amazon regarding the Friday strike, competing products, COVID-19 safety efforts, and its carbon-neutral pledge.

Topics Amazon

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Keith Wagstaff

Keith Wagstaff is an assistant editor at Mashable and a terrible Settlers of Catan player. He has written for TIME, The Wall Street Journal Magazine, NBC News, The Village Voice, VICE, GQ and New York Magazine, among many other reputable and not-so-reputable publications. After nearly a decade in New York City, he now lives in his native Los Angeles.


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