The Postal Service's unmatched ability to reach every household and business in America six days a week is a vital part of the nation's infrastructure.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
The Postal Service delivers mail six days a week to nearly 140 million addresses. Every year this number increases by 2 million.
Whether you are a low-income elderly woman living at the end of a dirt road in Vermont or a wealthy CEO living on Park Avenue, you get your mail six days a week. And you pay for this service at a cost far less than anywhere else in the industrialized world.
The United States Postal Service has a problem. People aren't sending as much mail as they used to. That means less postage revenue and difficulty paying the bills.
In an urban area, you're not going to be an hour away from another post office.
The federal government spends millions to run the Postal Service. I could lose your mail for half of that.
The Postal Service is a vitally important institution for the American people. It must be saved.
The Postal Service is huge - employing more than a half million people - and its history is long and complicated.
The ghastly thing about postal strikes is that after they are over, the service returns to normal.
As a trusted institution with brick-and-mortar facilities in every corner of the United States, our public Postal Service is uniquely positioned to serve as a communications, finance, and service hub for the 21st century.
The United States Postal Service is the world's most efficient postal system.
No opposing quotes found.