The Kyrie Irving-boosted book and film Hebrews to Negroes: Wake up Black America will remain for sale on Amazon, CEO Andy Jassy confirmed, despite a celebrity-backed petition calling for their removal.
In an appearance at the New York Times DealBook conference, Andy Jassy described the task of labeling or removing any works “whose primary purpose is not to espouse hate” a “very slippery slope.” Moderating content for sale on Amazon “is one of the trickiest issues we deal with,” Jassy said. “Some cases are more straightforward — if you have works that actively promote or incite violence, or teaches people how to do things like pedophilia, those are easy.
We don’t allow those. … When you have content whose primary purpose is not to espouse hate or ascribe negative characteristics to people, that is much trickier and a very slippery slope if we take a lot of those out of the store.” Amazon has “hundreds of millions of customers with lots of different viewpoints,” Jassy continued.
As a retailer, “we have to be able to allow access to those viewpoints even if they are objectionable and even if they differ from our own personal viewpoints.” When moderator Andrew Ross Sorkin told Jassy he is troubled by the availability of the book and film because he is Jewish, the Amazon CEO said he is Jewish as well. “I am worried about anti-Semitism and I find several parts of that work objectionable, but I think you have to have principles if you’re going to manage something as large as we are.” Irving was suspended by his NBA team, the Brooklyn Nets, earlier this fall after he tweeted a link to the documentary, which contains a range of anti-Semitic charges.
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