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BREAKING: Amazon To Lay Off 30,000 Corporate Workers Amid AI Expansion Fears

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(DDM) — In what could be one of the largest corporate downsizings in recent U.S. history, Amazon is preparing to lay off as many as 30,000 corporate employees beginning tomorrow, according to reports emerging from multiple media outlets.

Diaspora Digital Media (DDM) gathered that the massive job cuts, representing nearly 10% of Amazon’s global corporate workforce, come amid growing fears that the rapid adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) is accelerating the erosion of white-collar jobs in major industries.

According to Reuters, which first broke the story, the layoffs are expected to impact departments across Amazon’s corporate operations, though the company has yet to release an official statement confirming which divisions will be affected. CNN has also reached out to Amazon for comment.

With over 350,000 corporate employees, according to a 2024 filing with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Amazon’s latest retrenchment marks another milestone in its continued efforts to streamline operations and embrace automation.

DDM recalls that in June 2024, Amazon CEO Andy Jassy hinted at future workforce reductions in a blog post addressed to employees, stating that the company’s increasing reliance on AI-powered efficiency would likely lead to a “smaller, more focused workforce” in the near future.

“It’s about working smarter, not necessarily employing more people,” Jassy wrote at the time, suggesting that machine learning systems were beginning to handle tasks once reserved for human managers and analysts.

The looming cuts, DDM learned, follow similar mass layoffs announced in 2023, when Amazon eliminated approximately 27,000 positions across its human resources, Amazon Stores, and Web Services divisions.

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Those cuts, Jassy said, were driven by a worsening global economic outlook and post-pandemic restructuring.

This latest wave, however, appears tied more directly to technological disruption than economic strain, signaling a deeper shift in how big tech companies envision their future workforce.

Analysts say the move underscores how AI is transforming not only manual labor but also traditionally stable corporate roles such as marketing, logistics, and data management.

Industry observers warn that the scale of Amazon’s layoffs could send shockwaves through the U.S. labor market, already grappling with uncertainty from inflation pressures and rising interest rates.

Some economists predict that the trend may extend to other tech giants, potentially triggering a new wave of job insecurity in the broader corporate sector.

DDM analysis shows that Amazon’s continued pivot toward AI-driven automation mirrors similar moves by competitors like Google, Meta, and Microsoft, each of which has invested heavily in AI systems while quietly trimming their human workforce.

While Amazon remains one of the world’s most valuable companies, with annual revenues surpassing $575 billion, the timing of the layoffs, just months before the holiday shopping season, is raising concerns about employee morale and long-term productivity.

Labor unions and worker advocacy groups have also criticized the tech giant’s decision, accusing it of prioritizing shareholder gains and automation over workers’ livelihoods.

As the first round of layoffs begins tomorrow, the broader question, analysts say, is not just how many jobs will be lost, but how many will never return in an era where artificial intelligence continues to redefine the global workforce.

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Asti Christmas Market: Europe’s Hidden Festive Gem Revealed

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Europe’s Christmas markets are legendary, drawing tourists to Germany, Austria, and other popular destinations.

But Italy is quietly home to one of the continent’s most enchanting festive experiences, tucked away in the Piedmont region.

Asti, located just 34 miles southeast of Turin, is a medieval city renowned for its sparkling wine, historic towers, and the Palio di Asti horse race.

During the holiday season, the city transforms into a magical winter wonderland, earning recognition as one of Europe’s top Christmas markets for 2025.

The Asti Christmas Market was named the “Best Fairytale Christmas Market” in the European Best Destinations ranking.

It joins prestigious markets such as Gdansk in Poland, Brussels’ Winter Wonders, and Riga in Latvia.

Visitors can explore Piazza Alfieri, which hosts over 140 wooden stalls offering handmade crafts, regional gastronomy, and street food.

The market opens from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. starting Saturday, November 15, and runs until December 21.

During the first weeks, it is open on weekends only, expanding to Thursday through Sunday from December 6, with an additional opening on Monday, December 8.

Entry to the Asti Christmas Market is free and does not require prior booking.

Food lovers are treated to a strong selection of Piedmontese cuisine, local wines, and vibrant street-food options.

Travelers can reach Asti conveniently via Turin’s major airport (TRN), just 43 miles away.

Ryanair flights from London Stansted to Turin are currently priced as low as £19 for early December, a fraction of typical fares to Germany or Austria.

From Turin, trains run every 30 minutes to Asti, taking 35 to 50 minutes. One-way tickets cost €6-10 (£5.30-£8.80) and can be purchased at the station or online via Trenitalia.

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For those preferring to drive, the journey along the A21 motorway from Turin to Asti takes approximately 50 minutes.

With its combination of affordability, festive charm, and authentic Italian culture, Asti’s Christmas Market is emerging as a must-visit destination for holiday travelers seeking something beyond the usual European hotspots.

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President Trump signs bill to end longest U.S. shutdown

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(DDM) – Former U.S. President Donald Trump has signed legislation to reopen the federal government, officially ending the longest shutdown in American history.

The move comes after weeks of tense negotiations between the White House and Congress over border wall funding, which had caused the partial shutdown to drag on for more than a month.

DDM notes that Hundreds of thousands of federal workers were forced to go without pay during the standoff, sparking widespread protests and economic disruptions across the United States.

The new funding bill, which received bipartisan support, restores full operations to federal agencies and guarantees back pay to affected workers.

Trump, in a brief statement after signing the legislation, said the decision was made to “put the American people first” and to allow the government to “get back to work.”

He maintained that the administration would continue to push for stronger border security, but emphasized that national stability and economic continuity were immediate priorities.

Political analysts described the move as a calculated step to ease mounting public pressure and economic concerns that had intensified during the record shutdown.

Economists also warned that the prolonged closure had cost the U.S. economy billions of dollars in lost productivity, affecting sectors from aviation to public health.

Federal agencies have since resumed full operations, while workers across departments have expressed relief after weeks of uncertainty and financial hardship..

Observers say the episode could have lasting political consequences, testing both party unity and the limits of executive leverage in U.S. governance.

As government offices reopen, attention has now shifted to preventing a repeat of such shutdowns, which many see as damaging to public confidence and national reputation.

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The U.S. shutdown, which began over disagreements surrounding border wall allocations, has now entered history as the longest and most economically costly in the nation’s democratic era.

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From Anambra Soil to Global Market: Nwosu’s Blueprint

By Paschal Azubuike

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Maize and yam farming
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To Build Palm Oil and Cassava Estates Like Malaysia and Prosper Our Rural Families

In the quiet farmlands of Anambra, where generations have tilled the soil with hope, a new dawn is rising.

For too long, our rural communities have worked hard yet gained little.

Our cassava farmers heroes in worn slippers, process their harvest with bare hands.

Our palm oil producers still rely on age old methods, while nations like Malaysia turned palm oil into a global goldmine.

But in this season of political and farming awakening, one man stands with a vision rooted in our soil and aimed at the world, John Nwosu of the African Democratic Congress (ADC).

African Democratic Congress (ADC) gubernatorial candidate, Mr. John Chuma Nwosu

African Democratic Congress (ADC) gubernatorial candidate, Mr. John Chuma Nwosu

Nwosu isn’t just promising development.

He is promising dignity and wealth, actually, a return of pride to the farmers who feed our land.

Nwosu’s blueprint is bold and transformative:

  • Build modern palm oil plantations and processing estates

  • Develop cassava value-chain zones powered by technology

  • Train and support rural farmers with access to finance
  • Create storage, processing, and export hubs
  • Turn our villages into international agro investment destinations

This is not politics as usual; this is a mission to lift our rural families from subsistence to prosperity.

A mission to ensure that the hands that plant are the hands that profit.

A mission to turn Anambra into Nigeria’s food to wealth capital.

“Proudly Anambra” palm oil and cassava products

Imagine Ogbaru, Ihiala, Aguata, and Ayamelum booming like Malaysia’s Selangor and our youths returning home to run agro-industries, instead of fleeing in search of survival.

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Imagine women farmers earning globally competitive incomes, while branded “Proudly Anambra” palm oil and cassava products on shelves from Lagos to London, Dubai to New York.

For years we watched the world grow wealthy from crops that originated here.

Now, John Nwosu says “it is our turn; it is Anambra’s turn”.

No farmer will be forgotten. No rural child will be left behind.

With ADC, our land will work for us not the other way around.

This is not just agriculture, it is liberation. It is job creation. It is rural revival.

And it begins with one vote. One commitment. One vision for prosperity rooted in the red soil of home.

Ndi Anambra, the future is in our farms and the future is now.

Vote John Nwosu, vote ADC!

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