Rynar wrote:
It's an essential line of communication durring a domestic invasion when power, almost certainly, would be shut down.
I have to say, if there is a domestic invasion which causes a loss of power on any large scale, do you think the mail will still go through?
1)Consider how dependant the USPS is on devices that run on electricity. Sorting machines, computers, hell the lights in the room. If there were to be that level of disruption, has the USPS shown that they would somehow adapt and overcome?
2) Any sort of domestic invasion that would cause a loss of power, do you think the USPS workers would come in and start running mail still?
3) Do you think that in the case of a large scale power outage, the USPS is equipped to manually sort, transport and deliver the mail, and do you think that they have employees who are trained in, and capable of this task?
My answers are no, and oddly enough today has underscored the outdated nature of the USPS. I've been expecting packages all week. All of them were shipped from the same geographical area in the US and listed shipped on the same day. Two boxes were via FedEx- came early, tracking numbers provided gave me a clear indication where they were and that I could expect them earlier then promised. One box was via UPS. Came a day earlier then promised, tracking number gave me a rough idea where it was in it's route. One item was able to be shipped via USPS regular mail. Came at the promised time. Last package- via USPS. Tracking number provided tells me it's not even in my State yet. Was supposed to be here last Wednesday. "Customer Service" at the USPS can't tell me anything I can't see via the package tracker.
I'd like to say this is isolated, but anytime I recieve anything that isn't a letter via USPS it's usually a week later than it's supposed to be. So the USPS could go away tomorrow and I'd be quite happy, and unaffected.