There is an institution older than the United States itself that is now fighting for its survival, and too many people in power are watching it happen without lifting a finger.
The United States Postal Service was founded in 1775, a year before the Declaration of Independence. Benjamin Franklin was the first Postmaster General. It has survived wars, depressions, technological upheavals, and the death of the handwritten letter. It has never missed a day of service. Today, it is being quietly bled out, and the silence from Congress is its own kind of crisis.
The Postmaster General has warned lawmakers that the agency is at a “critical juncture” and will run out of cash in less than a year unless Congress allows it to borrow more money. “At our current rate, we’ll be out of cash in less than 12 months. So in about a year from now, the postal service would be unable to deliver the mail,” Postmaster General David Steiner said before a House subcommittee. This is not a hypothetical. USPS suspended employer pension contributions in April 2026, pausing roughly $200 million every two weeks to free $2.5 billion in cash just to keep the lights on.
This is the slow unraveling of an institution that helped build the American middle class.
The Postal Service was never just a place to buy stamps. It was infrastructure. It was connectivity before broadband. It was the original equalizer, guaranteeing that a family in rural Mississippi and a family in Manhattan received the same service at the same price. It built a path into the middle class for generations of Black Americans who could not access employment in the private sector. Postal work was union work, stable work, dignified work, one of the first federal employers to hire Black men and women at a meaningful scale. In city after city, the post office was not just a government building; it was a community anchor.
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