They're the biggest bookstore in the world and they've had a long-term policy of selling a billion books on both sides of every issue. They've been calledout by it before, but it is what it is.
I think it's fine to criticize that stance, but having a book in your bookstore isn't the same as promoting it's views yourself, and being the biggest bookstore in the world actually means you show more perspectives, not fewer.
Amazon HAS been pressed by Jewish folk to remove anti-semitic material, many many times. It happens all the time.
“Did six million really die”?
www.latimes.com
Its carefully curated search engine serves up anti-Semitism in response to reasonable queries. The problem reflects a wider issue in the world of tech.
www.tabletmag.com
The e-commerce giant Amazon has been called out by several organisations for selling Nazi propaganda including children books by Julius Streicher who was charged and executed during the Nuremberg trials.
www.euronews.com
The Auschwitz Memorial criticised Amazon on Sunday for fictitious depictions of the Holocaust in its Prime series "Hunters" and for selling books of Nazi propaganda.
www.reuters.com
The Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum has called on the leading online retailer, Amazon, to stop selling anti-Semitic literature on its website.
www.museumnext.com
Amazon sells and streams more than 30 Nazi propaganda films, according to information from a watchdog group provided to the Washington Free Beacon.
freebeacon.com
Claiming that Jewish folk have never pressed Amazon for this shyt is just false. They press them all the time. But it's still obviously true that no bookseller believes or supports every book in their bookstore, and
that there isn't equivilence between having a book in your bookstore and actually pushing the ideas in that book.