No, my view is that you're not going to stop it by complaining about the companies that are taking the rebates offered (arguably they have a fiduciary duty to the shareholders to take such deals).
If you want to stop it then the ire should be directed at the countries, states, cities, etc that are offering the rebates, not the companies accepting the deals.
We could, but I'd suggest one would be more effective than the other. Added to that, the outrage towards companies is pretty inconsistent, for instance this only becoming an issue when Amazon is receiving the subsidy.
No, my view is that you're not going to stop it by complaining about the companies that are taking the rebates offered (arguably they have a fiduciary duty to the shareholders to take such deals).
If you want to stop it then the ire should be directed at the countries, states, cities, etc that are offering the rebates, not the companies accepting the deals.