He must have missed the field trip

I had two uncles who worked for the Post Office. The one with whom I share a name lived in the town where I grew up, and his was the down town delivery route, so he interacted directly with people and not with faceless mailboxes.

As he went from store to store, he always had time to share a joke or just a bit of conversation with the proprietors and any customers present.

He didn’t just deliver the mail; he made its delivery an experience.

One time he was assigned to teach a law student who had taken a post office job to pay his way through law school how to sort the mail before delivery, deliver it, and then perform whatever needed to be done after the route was finished. He taught the student the importance of interaction and that delivering the mail was more than a job, but a chance to speak with people, listen to them even if what they had to say was the unloading of a sad tale, and being a bright spot in anyone’s day.

That student later became a District Attorney and then a member of Congress, and at a local political meeting when I first moved back to Massachusetts, he heard my name, asked if I knew my namesake, and when I told him the man he spoke of was my uncle, he told me that much of the interpersonal skills my uncle had taught him had been helpful in his election campaigns and subsequent service.

When I was very young, if we were with my uncle, walking or riding in his car, he would call out, and we would salute any mail man we saw.

He also always beep the car horn whenever we drove under an overpass on the highway, but to pursue that would be a digression

But regardless of his conversations, jokes, interactions with those on his route, his teaching a future politician important skills, and promoting respect for those who delivered the mail, his most important action and the purpose of his profession was to deliver the mail from whoever sent it to whomever it was addressed.

He was, as the term was in his day, a “Mail Man.”

Although he claims to be one with the common man and must have received mail for most of his life, it is plain that Trump has no idea how the post office, upon which the common man relies, actually works or what it is for.

In one of his Father Brown mysteries, G.K. Chesterton had a postman as his criminal because being a daily visitor to any home, the postman is virtually invisible in the consciousness of most people and could commit a crime without anyone taking notice. At certain times of the day people go to their mailboxes and the mail is there, while few notice its delivery.

Trump seems to think letters and packages somehow just magically appear with no one having the responsibility of making sure it arrives, and that the whole process is free.
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Trump hates Amazon mainly because its owner also owns the Washington Post, not a fan of his, and Trump is using the power of the government as a tool for petty revenge.

To win people to his side, he attempted to paint Amazon as a leach and a destroyer of the country , and in so doing revealed he does not know why the post office exist, what it does, or how it does it.

Trump exposed its dark underbelly by letting us know that Amazon uses the United States Postal Service to deliver its mail.

As he put it, Amazon uses “our Postal System as their delivery boy.”

Sort of what we all do because, as it mission statement claims,

“The Postal Service mission is to provide a reliable, efficient, trusted and affordable universal delivery service that connects people and helps businesses grow.”

It is the only delivery system that goes to every address in the country delivering letters and packages, both domestic and international, but somehow, because it uses the USPS, Amazon is “causing tremendous loss to the U.S.”

Amazon does not tell the USPS to deliver its packages without paying for the service, but either pays it itself on those articles that come with “free shipping” for the consumer, or by charging a shipping fee. Either way the USPS gets money from Amazon, as well as any company or individual that ships a package, and USPS acknowledges that with certain losses forced on it by a foolish act of congress on how pensions are to be handled, the profits from package delivery is one of the few bright spots.

According to former Postmaster General Jack Potter,

 “It’s well justified that they deliver those packages, and they make money on it.”

If Amazon didn’t use the Post Office, considering the number of packages it ships, the USPS would lose a large amount of its income.

One would think that on the day it happened, little Donnie missed his school field trip to the post office.

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