About Amazon.com and CIA

In another thread, I saw an anon laugh that the CIA had anything to do with making Amazon what it is. It does not take much research to find the info. Thought I would post this in a new thread, since it is key to understanding Jeff Bezos. Not only is he a CIA asset via Amazon, but he is also the frontman owning the Washington Post, which is CIA disinfo media (and, as such, a threat to national security).

Anon said in the other thread:

Lmfao really do tell how is AMAZON a product of cia?

Bruh I’ve been around Amazon for decades, it literally did not have the trajectory it has now until we’ll after, I dunno, 2005-2008 somewhere.

So while there is rot now within it, itself and its service is not in itself rotten to the core.

Whether Bezos was corrupt from the beginning or not, the company became indebted to the CIA and, consequently, an asset of the CIA. If you don't believe that, you would have to explain why Bezos also owns the WaPo, which is clearly CIA disinfo media.

Here is the quick story of Amazon --

Amazon started in 1994 with $300,000 and eventually got $8 million in seed money. It then went public.

https://www.quora.com/Who-were-the-...ment-did-Amazon-receive-in-total?share=1

It lost money for many, many years, but somehow always got funding from somewhere to stay afloat. It was driving other companies out of business with low prices, even though it was constantly losing money. Just like what the Chinese do.

Then in 2013, it got a massive injection of $600 million from the CIA.

https://www.theatlantic.com/technol...-about-the-cias-deal-with-amazon/374632/

Two years later, the stock took off like a rocket and became the huge company it is today.

https://www.barchart.com/stocks/quotes/AMZN/interactive-chart

CIA money made Amazon. What does CIA want in return?

CIA (and other US Govt. entities) awarded cloud contracts to Amazon as well (first time this had happened). Here is another connection for you OP.

https://www.nextgov.com/it-moderniz...ltibillion-dollar-cloud-contract/170227/

https://www.foxbusiness.com/technol...n-microsoft-google-ibm-and-oracle-report