Sorry, it'll never happen. Not having to pay taxes and being the best of the tiny group of first movers in the online catalog shopping space space has allowed it to eliminate both brick and mortar and online retail competition. It's even confident enough in its institutionalization that it's been gradually lowering the quality of its service while making wildly successful investor fueled infrastructure plays for both the basic fabric of the internet and the logistics of all physical world home-deliveries.
A government whose elements nearly-unanimously insist that a company isn't a monopoly until it both controls 100% of all possible industries that can be substitute products for its own industry and owns all of its suppliers, could "ironically" never muster the power to break up a theoretical business that met that standard. At that point, that business has become an inseparable part of the government, itself.
Sorry for the scare quotes around "ironically," but I can't help believing that this mistake is intentional, not accidental. People who insist that a company has to be all-powerful before it's necessary to break that company up (in order to protect the improvements from competition that free markets use to justify themselves) can't possibly fail to see that all-powerful companies can't be broken up, because they are all-powerful. It's like having a law against dictators that only kicks in once someone has completely taken over the government.
A government whose elements nearly-unanimously insist that a company isn't a monopoly until it both controls 100% of all possible industries that can be substitute products for its own industry and owns all of its suppliers, could "ironically" never muster the power to break up a theoretical business that met that standard. At that point, that business has become an inseparable part of the government, itself.
Sorry for the scare quotes around "ironically," but I can't help believing that this mistake is intentional, not accidental. People who insist that a company has to be all-powerful before it's necessary to break that company up (in order to protect the improvements from competition that free markets use to justify themselves) can't possibly fail to see that all-powerful companies can't be broken up, because they are all-powerful. It's like having a law against dictators that only kicks in once someone has completely taken over the government.