OT/MISC Google fires 28 workers for protesting $1.2 billion Israel contract

Dash

Veteran Member

Google fires 28 workers for protesting $1.2 billion Israel contract​

Workers staged sit-in protests this week at the company’s offices in Seattle, New York and Sunnyvale, California over Project Nimbus, a joint contract to provide the Israeli government and military with cloud and artificial intelligence services.​

April 18, 2024, 7:44 AM EDT

Google has fired more than two dozen employees for protesting the company's $1.2 billion contract to provide the Israeli government and military with cloud and artificial intelligence services.

The 28 firings come after nine employees were arrested Tuesday night following a sit-in at the company’s offices in Seattle, New York and Sunnyvale, California — including one at Google Cloud CEO Thomas Kurian’s office, according to the group that organized the demonstration, No Tech for Apartheid.

Protestors sat in his office for more than nine hours, wearing shirts and raising banners that read “No more genocide for profit,” until their eventual arrest.

It is the latest high-profile clash in the United States stoked by tensions over the Israel-Hamas war.

“These protests were part of a longstanding campaign by a group of organizations and people who largely don’t work at Google," a Google spokesperson told NBC News in a statement Wednesday.

"A small number of employee protesters entered and disrupted a few of our locations. Physically impeding other employees’ work and preventing them from accessing our facilities is a clear violation of our policies, and completely unacceptable behavior. After refusing multiple requests to leave the premises, law enforcement was engaged to remove them to ensure office safety," the statement said.

"We have so far concluded individual investigations that resulted in the termination of employment for 28 employees, and will continue to investigate and take action as needed," it added.

The protests were led by No Tech for Apartheid, a group of tech workers who have been demanding Amazon and Google drop their Project Nimbus, which is a joint $1.2 billion contract providing the Israeli government and military with cloud infrastructure, artificial intelligence services and data centers.

No Tech for Apartheid said Google had fired the employees “indiscriminately” and the workers had engaged in a “peaceful sit-in and refusing to leave did not damage property or threaten other workers.”

“This excuse to avoid confronting us and our concerns directly, and attempt to justify its illegal, retaliatory firings, is a lie,” it said in a statement late Wednesday, accusing the company of valuing its contract with the Israeli government more than its employees.

Google employees protests at the company offices in Sunnyvale, Calif., in an image posted to social media on Wednesday.
Google employees protests at the company offices in Sunnyvale, Calif., in an image posted to social media on Wednesday.@notechforapartheir via Instagram

Google issued a stern warning to its employees, with the company’s vice president of global security, Chris Rackow, saying, “If you’re one of the few who are tempted to think we’re going to overlook conduct that violates our policies, think again,” according to an internal memo obtained by CNBC.

The company also said that its work "is not directed at highly sensitive, classified, or military workloads relevant to weapons or intelligence services.”

“Google Cloud supports numerous governments around the world in countries where we operate, including the Israeli government, with our generally available cloud computing services,” a Google spokesperson told CNBC on Wednesday evening.

The Israeli prime minister's office and Israel Defense Forces did not immediately respond to a request for comment from NBC News.

The workers were also protesting labor conditions at the company — saying the contract was impacting “health and safety on the job” — and what they said was Google’s disregard “for the well-being of our Palestinian, Arab, and Muslim colleagues facing Google-enabled racism, discrimination, harassment, and censorship.”

The project has become a “major health & safety workplace conditions issue,” with many employees quitting after citing “mental health consequences of working at a company that is using their labor to enable a genocide,” the group said in a statement posted on Medium on Wednesday.

“On a personal level, I am opposed to Google taking any military contracts — no matter which government they’re with or what exactly the contract is about,” Cheyne Anderson, a Google Cloud software engineer based in Washington, told CNBC on Wednesday.

Anderson was one of the nine workers arrested across the country on Tuesday, with some of those arrests streamed live on Twitch.

Four people were arrested for “trespassing” inside Google’s New York Office, a spokesperson for the New York Police told NBC News on Wednesday. Almost 50 protesters had taken part in the demonstration, the spokesperson said.
Google fires 28 workers for protesting $1.2 billion Israel contract
 

Dash

Veteran Member
There are big problems at Google. The protests were the result of a culture that they actively promote.

One of the fired workers was a rape apologist who worked on Google’s child safety team. The below tweet is from December 2023.

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progressingamerica

Contributing Member
The protests were the result of a culture that they actively promote.

This. Google promotes it.

I'm so glad I put in the effort to get off of big tech Google, without resorting to big tech Apple.(cellphone)

It is a seriously problematic matter to give money to companies such as this when they turn around, sharpen it up, and use the money against us in a weaponized fashion.

Most people fund woke, no matter how much they dislike it. For me though, I'm out.
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
Not a fan of Google at all but when you work for them and are on the time clock you don't get to have an opinion during working hours and off working hours you can exercise your free speech rights but there are consequences.

Not sure that's so. I said no at one point because my boss wanted me to write an article about some company's president's daughter who got killed in the Hamas attacks on Israel. I was instructed to use the word "butchered." I'm happy to do what's asked of me, but I've got to keep my future employability in mind, you know?
 

Dash

Veteran Member
How many of these people cared at all about the plight of the Palestinians before 10/7? How may have even a basic knowledge of the complex history of the region?

I find it interesting that so many are willing to risk well paying jobs (with excellent benefits) for social credit. A day of activism paid for by Soros can’t be as lucrative as a gig at Google.

The progressive left are the most privileged people on Earth.
 
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