Mr BURNELL (Spence) (13:52): Tomorrow is Black Friday. It is important to recognise that those bargains, which millions of people enjoy, don't come from nothing. They come from the efforts of workers around the country and beyond. Those efforts result in the billions of dollars of revenue their employers receive every year—employers like Amazon. But despite the backbreaking shifts and the stupidly high quotas that these workers fulfill to generate that revenue, Amazon doesn't give back. Their employees are instead met with appalling conditions on the job. This includes actual surveillance of human beings in the workplace, punitively enforced through advanced digital technology, to coercively control workers. Even worse, when these workers speak out about this—and they already spend every day fearing for their job security—Amazon makes it as hard as possible for them to organise, which entrenches that company's shocking behaviour even further. Amazon aren't only ripping off their workers with their idea of Black Friday deals. They're also actively dodging taxes in this country and elsewhere, rounding out a company doing everything it can to avoid corporate social responsibility both on the warehouse floor and across the nation as a whole. That's why I'm proud to stand in solidarity with the TWU, the SDA and workers all over the world to make Amazon pay this Black Friday. People work to live; they don't live to work. The sooner Amazon realises that, the sooner its employees will enjoy better lives.