Your points are valid and I don't have an answer if people experience more freedom. I do think we live in the most exciting time with the most opportunity to live a best life.
Bezos was a regular human who built a conglomeration. I like to believe that anyone can chase there dream and succeed.
Yeah, it's cool. I just learned to see things differently during my time at Amazon. For over five years I worked a degrading job, becoming stupider by the day while making a killing. The work was so boring and pointless I started to wonder if they just pay people to keep them stupid. There's no way more than 5% of what went on in my department was of any real value to anyone.
At the same time I love using Uber, which probably would be a much shittier service without AWS (or one of its competitors) -- if it could exist at all without them. I don't order many packages, but of course I like getting them the next day. I couldn't give a shit about 99% of the worthless apps that flood onto my screen, but I like having my music library with Amazon, streaming in anytime, anywhere, to any device.
Are all these things worth it? Before working at Amazon, I would have said "yes" without hesitation. But the longer I worked there, the more I started to question myself.
I felt less "human" every day. What did it matter if I could get movies on demand, when I couldn't stop thinking about some annoying conflict at work long enough to enjoy one? Why did I cares about news, books or any cultural material? Every nose-to-monitor day, I forgot more and more of the real-world and historical context needed to understand and enjoy them in the first place. I liked buying expensive clothes with my big paychecks, but they just gathered dust, since I never went anywhere but the office and gym.
In short, I started to comprehend the common paranoia about "consumerism" after seeing firsthand the gross overpayment for pointless services rendered by a rapidly-dehumanized, disposable, and quickly-restocked immigrant workforce, all perpetuated to ensure that 99.999% uptime, 4.98 star service, 14.7 minute delivery window, and burgeoning, bursting catalogue we call progress. Wanton waste disguised as "efficiency" -- who really pays the price for those competition-crushing savings if not -- you, the worker?
Sorry, sort of tangential rant, not really directed at you.