(New York, N.Y.) – Earlier this month, Amazon
announced a ban on the sale of Adolf Hitler’s
Mein Kampf from
its site, telling sellers that they would no longer be allowed to list
the autobiographical screed on its website, citing sales as a
violation of their code of conduct. However, Amazon quietly
reversed
the policy and once again made the manifesto available for sale under
the guise of free speech. The company claimed that it did not want to
determine what people are allowed to read.
Amazon has official guidelines
prohibiting the sale of products that “promote, incite or glorify
hatred, violence, sexual or religious intolerance or promote
organizations with such views.”
Amazon’s policy reversal demonstrates that the company is not
serious about enforcing its own guidelines. Rather, the tech giant is
simply interested in garnering positive media coverage. By allowing
these extremist materials to remain for sale on their site, Amazon is
enabling these egregious works to continue promoting hateful
ideologies and encouraging violence. Unfortunately, the company’s
behavior is unsurprising. Amazon has long allowed the sale of
anti-Semitic, neo-Nazi manifestos such as The Turner
Diaries and Siege
on its site, both of which have facilitated the radicalization of
white nationalists. If Amazon was truly committed to prohibiting the
sale of all products that promote hatred and violence, they would be
doing so consistently and transparently.
As CEP has
previously highlighted, Internet platforms like Amazon have long
normalized the sale of neo-Nazi propaganda. A February 9 article
in the New York Times about the multi-billion dollar company
wrote it was “quietly canceling its Nazis” stating that Amazon was
halting sales of several neo-Nazi and white supremacist books.
However, CEP found
that claim to be false after locating copies of the William
Luther Pierce’s white supremacist book The Turner Diaries
still
available for sale through the Amazon Marketplace,
which is used by third-party sellers. The Turner Diaries
describes a white supremacist revolution in the U.S. and eventual
genocide. The book has helped inspire several terrorists and
extremists, including Timothy McVeigh, who perpetrated the 1995
Oklahoma City bombing, and Anders Breivik, who murdered 77 people in
two terror attacks in Norway on July 22, 2011.
CEP has
also previously noted that a new edition of the book
Siege, by James Mason, was made available for sale in 2018.
Unlike The Turner Diaries which is sold via the Marketplace,
the 2018 edition of Siege was made available on Amazon’s main site,
meaning it was in an Amazon warehouse and could be shipped via Amazon
Prime. The new edition of Siege has since been removed from the
platform, but is still
available through the Marketplace. Siege advocates for a
violent leaderless neo-Nazi guerilla movement and lone wolf terrorism
to bring down the government. The book is considered one of the most
important pieces of work for the American neo-Nazi group Atomwaffen
Division, whose members have killed five people since May 2017. One of
the group’s founding members, Brandon Russell, was sentenced to five
years in prison in January 2018 for possessing explosives.
To read the CEP report The Turner Diaries’ Ties to
Extremists, please click here.
To read the CEP report James Mason’s Siege: Ties to
Extremists, please click here.
To read the CEP report U.S. White Supremacy Groups, please
click here.