KEY POINTS
  • Greycroft co-founder Alan Patricof said Friday that Amazon is "not necessarily" a bad company.
  • The venture capitalist pointed to empty storefronts and the country's worsening drug epidemic as evidence of communities breaking down — a trend he said Amazon advances.
  • Brick-and-mortar retailer Walmart raised similar concerns when it started moving in across the country. But at least then, Patricof said, people were engaging in the outside world.

Greycroft co-founder Alan Patricof said Friday that Amazon is "not necessarily" a bad company, but urged that "as a society we have to think about the fact that, you know, at what point do we say we're destroying the fabric of America?"

The venture capitalist pointed to empty storefronts and the country's worsening drug epidemic as evidence of communities breaking down — a trend he said Amazon advances.