New England Diary

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Jim Hightower: Predatory companies seek to destroy the most popular federal agency: the Postal Service

Via OtherWords.org

A half-dollar hardly counts as money these days — it won’t even buy a cup of coffee. But pssssst… here’s an amazing half-dollar bargain for you: A first-class postage stamp.

For 50 cents, you get the stamp, 3 cents in change, and America’s phenomenal network of post office workers and letter carriers, who will deliver your missive into any of the 43,000 zip codes of this vast country.

Our public Postal Service literally delivers, and many of our post offices serve as treasured community centers — two reasons that the U.S. mail service consistently ranks highest of all federal agencies in public support.

So, naturally, it must be  ravaged and ultimately eliminated.

That’s what passes for logic in the back rooms of Congress and in the boardrooms of predatory corporations that want to take control our mail for their profit.

They keep demonizing anything public — especially any public service that actually works and is popular — because the corporate powers and the Congress critters they buy in bulk ultimately intend to privatize all of the people’s government. To advance their plutocratic vision, they’re out to tarnish the Postal Service as a massive, money-sucking, dying, bureaucratic behemoth.

But here are a few facts they don’t want you to realize.

One, this public agency provides affordable mail service to all, in poor communities as well as rich. Two, it does this without a dime of taxpayer money, financing its entire operation with the sale of stamps and services. And three, it provides hundreds of thousands of solid middle-class jobs spread throughout every zip code.

To help keep this public jewel out of the hands of a few greed-headed, price-gouging, low-wage, tax-dodging corporations, support “A Grand Alliance To Save Our Public Post Offices.” Find it at www.AGrandAlliance.org.

Jim Hightower is a radio commentator,  public speaker and the editor of the  newsletter, The Hightower Lowdown. He wrote this for OtherWords.org.