The United States Post Office

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Environment Destroyer
“One of the things the government can 't do is run anything. The only things our government runs are the post office and the railroads, and both of them are bankrupt.” These are the words of Lee Iacocca, and although Iacocca was sarcastic about the power of the government, what about the post office (post office quotes)? Is the fine, dandy, and efficient post office we had back in the 1800s still apart of our world today? According to PSB.Org the Post office is on it’s way to complete deterioration (Lee). The United States Post Office in our society today is not the one we used to know, the USPS’s demand of paper mail has declined, they cannot flourish in a dwindling economy, and they have cases flowing in complaining of unwanted mail.
In June 1788 the Constitution was ratified, in which gave congress the right to establish the Post Office, and post roads, as seen in Article I, Section 8, Clause 7. The Post Office was expanded and continued until a year later in September of 1789 when President George Washington, directed the first Postmaster General, Samuel Osgood (The Constitution and the Post Office). By this time there were seventy-five Post Offices and over 2000 miles post roads in which already existed. The congressional discussion at the time was where the roads and offices should be placed within the states. Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe were unsure if congress had the power to establish post offices, but Justice Joseph Story affirmed in his Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States that congress had this power considering the phrase “to establish” displays the means to create and likewise designate roads. Once the roads and offices are constructed they are subject to the laws of the s...

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...eive any further material from a particular sender.”
If you would have asked me my personal opinion on the post office before I completed it I would have been on board with the folks trying to fight for it’s life. Although the United States post office is a historical monument in America, it is really no longer needed. With the amount of money it is losing, the amount of trees it is destroying, and how quickly technology is advancing I believe it is truly hurting our world more than it is helping it. There are local offices and businesses that are capable of sending out our mail just as productively as the government run office. I am in favor of saving trees, more than I am for keeping something around that has been here for hundreds of years. In eliminating the United States Post Office our world would benefit environmentally, economically, as well as financially.

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