Inequality: it’s a topic we talk about week after week as a rallying cry to organize our industry. Bosses are well aware that inequality exists, and use the same tired talking points over and over about getting more underrepresented people into tech.



What gets lost in their narrative is the ways in which the tech industry profits off of, and reinforces inequality outside its office walls. The top four companies are near monopolies, but according to laws of capitalist expansion, being number one is never enough. There are only so many products you can sell before a market becomes oversaturated, so profitability becomes a matter of cutting labor costs. The stock market rises and falls, but incarceration is recession-proof. Since its inception, the tech industry has played an integral role in these processes. This worker’s perspective is an examination of the tech industry’s entanglement with labor exploitation, which is becoming harder to ignore each week as the gap between the haves and have-nots become more pronounced.



We trace the origin of the gig economy to the 2008 financial crisis, where the rich and powerful received a bailout, but the working class was left dramatically less stable. More people have found themselves in contingent labor situations without job security or benefits. If you ask us, the 2008 financial crisis is exactly what the ruling class wants. Back in ‘97, Alan Greenspan already explained to Congress that job insecurity is the backbone of U.S. economic policy. In the aftermath of this crisis, tech industry bosses rebranded this precarity into the gig economy. What they call disruption, innovation, and evolving the social order, we call techno-capitalists reinforcing and further entrenching this neocolonial system. What they call “new” has always been around: wealth and private property is created through the removal of indigenous people, the subjugation of everyone else into harsh labor and interminable debt.



The prison industrial complex, our present day's expression of slavery, is the continuation of this removal process that is thrust upon bodies deemed to no longer hold any surplus value. The tech industry has always played an integral role in this entire process, starting with surveillance: you’re either being watched or you’re the one doing the watching. The burden of surveillance has always fallen disproportionally on black bodies. Lantern laws become digitized as privacy becomes another tax on the poor.



But wealth comes not only from labor exploitation: land and resource theft was the foundation upon which U.S. hegemony arose. We see a continuation of this process today, as low-income residents are pushed out of neighborhoods to make way for wealthier newcomers. Whether through rising rents, housing discrimination, or calling the police, the end goal is to make room for what really matters: real estate.



If we have the labor that is integral to the creation of this world, that means we also have the power to remake it. To prevent this from happening, the ruling class is always finding ways to control their narrative. We saw this last month when Kickstarter leadership appropriated social justice language to explain why its employees shouldn't form a union. We saw this earlier this week when Google tried to appoint Kay Cole James, president of the Heritage Foundation, to its ethics board. When tech workers signed an open letter titled "Googlers Against Transphobia and Hate", Google initially didn't back down, and cited Kay's "free market thinking" as one of the reasons why they wanted her on their board. But the workers persisted. Soon enough, Google was forced to abandon the AI board altogether.



And for these reasons, what we're waging is emotional warfare; happy workers mean there won't be an uprising. But now we are letting bosses know that they can no longer buy our complicity with company perks, the total of which add up to less than a raise. The stakes are too great. As we continue to organize, we must never lose sight of the bigger picture: the inequality happening on the outside of office walls affects everything within. There's only one world that we all live in.