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Essay / The United States Post Office - 1028
Environmental Destroyer “One of the things government can't do is manage anything. The only things our government runs are the post office and the railroads, and both are bankrupt. » These are the words of Lee Iacocca, and even if Iacocca was being sarcastic about the power of government, what about the Post (Post quotes)? Is the refined, elegant and efficient post office we had in the 1800s still apart from our world today? According to PSB.Org, the post office is on the verge of completely deteriorating (Lee). The United States Post Office in our society today is no longer the one we knew, the demand for USPS paper mail has declined, they cannot thrive in a declining economy and they have complaints about unwanted mail. In June 1788, the Constitution was ratified, which gave Congress the right to establish the post office and post routes, as shown in Article I, Section 8, Clause 7. The post office was expanded and continued until a year later, in September 1789, when President George Washington, directed the first Postmaster General, Samuel Osgood (The Constitution and the Post Office). At that time, there were already seventy-five post offices and more than 2,000 miles of mail routes. At the time, the debate in Congress was over the location of roads and offices within states. Thomas Jefferson and James Monroe were unsure whether Congress had the power to create post offices, but Justice Joseph Story asserted in his Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States that Congress had this power, since the expression "establish" shows the means of establishing and establishing post offices. also designate roads. Once roads and offices are built, they are subject to the laws of the medium of paper...and receive any other documents from a particular sender. "If you had asked me my personal opinion at the post office before finishing it, I would have been on board with the people trying to fight for his life. Although the United States Post Office is a landmark history in America, it's really no longer necessary with the amount of money it's losing, the number of trees it's destroying, and how quickly technology is advancing, I think it's really doing more harm to our country. world than it helps. There are local offices and businesses that can send our mail as productively as the government office. I am in favor of saving trees, more than maintaining anything. which has been around for hundreds of years By eliminating the United States Postal Service, our world would benefit environmentally, economically and financially...