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Postal Service Says Killing Small Periodicals Is a "Win-Win"

Washington Dispatch: Defying the founding fathers, Bush appointees at the USPS have decided to strangle the free press.

November 3, 2007


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Elijah Cummings was angry. The Democratic congressman from Baltimore represents a district that is home to the Afro-American Newspaper, a weekly publication that is in jeopardy of going out of business due to the United States Postal Service's recent rate hike on small periodicals. Cummings' testiness showed when a House subcommittee heard testimony on the rate increase from a host of postal officials earlier this week.

"If these small publications go out of business, is that a win-win?" Cummings asked James Miller, chairman of the USPS's Board of Governors, the entity that approved the rate hikes, during one tense exchange.

"That's a hypothetical," Miller protested.

"Nah, nah, nah," Cummings said. "You got a lot of businesses that put out publications that are saying that this is going to affect them in a negative way.... I'm asking you a simple question. If they go out of business, is it a win-win?"

"I would say if they cannot cover their costs, it is a win-win situation," said Miller. "Let me tell you why I think that. Because other classes of mail would be covering their costs." He went on to explain that every American letter writer pays 200 percent of the cost of shipping his or her letter because small magazines and periodicals don't pay their fair share.

"So your answer is, it's a win-win for everybody but the people who go out of business," Cummings retorted.

"Yes, yes," Miller said, adding, "It's not that I'm heartless. It's not that we're heartless. We have to cover all sides. And I think the fairest thing is for every class of mail to cover the cost directly attributable to carrying their mail."

The problem is, Miller's comments muddled the issue, to put it charitably. Since the 1970s, all classes of mail have been required to cover the costs associated with their delivery, what's called attributable cost. But periodicals, as a class, get favorable treatment: They don't pay overhead, meaning that they don't foot the bill for the Postal Service's infrastructure, employees, and so on.

That's a tradition that goes back to the origins of the nation. The founding fathers saw the press as the lifeblood of democracy—only informed voters could compose a true democracy, they believed—and thus created a postal system that gave favorable rates to small periodicals. (George Washington actually supported mailing newspapers for free.) For 200 years, small periodicals and journals of opinion were given special treatment.

The 2007 rate hikes, which went into effect this summer, changed that. Now, periodicals are still expected to cover attributable costs and pay no overhead, but because the cost of delivering mail has gone up, rates within the class have gone up as well. In advance of the rate hike, the Postal Service submitted a proposal to the Postal Regulatory Commission that would have raised the rates in the class more or less evenly. The PRC rejected the proposal in favor of a rate package put forward by Time Warner that, unsurprisingly, hands small periodicals much steeper rate hikes than their large counterparts.

Small periodicals in some instances face a rate hike of up to 50 percent. An increase of that size is almost unbearable for periodicals that publish frequently, like the liberal Nation or the conservative National Review, both weeklies. For them, postal expenses make up a massive portion of their budgets. An increased cost of $500,000 per year, which is The Nation's estimate, would be devastating. (The rate hike is a smaller burden for Mother Jones, due to the fact that the magazine publishes six times a year. Nevertheless, Mother Jones opposed the rate hike earlier this year.)

Small periodicals and their devotees have been complaining about the rate scheme for months, but without the money for lobbyists and lawyers they're left only to fight the battle through petitions and rhetoric. Says Victor Navasky, publisher emeritus of The Nation, "These journals, whose core franchise is public discourse about public affairs, are—like water, national defense, public highways, and public education—a public good and as such it would seem to me ought to be paid for out of public funds."

That's not the sort of argument that is going to find sympathetic ears with Miller, who, in a long career in and around public service, has always shown a desire to privatize. In the Reagan Administration, Miller was executive director of a Presidential Task Force on Regulatory Relief, chairman of the Federal Trade Commission, and director of the Office of Management and Budget. When Miller left the administration in 1988, President Reagan commended him for playing "a leading role in removing the shackles of excessive regulation from our economy." Miller later sat on the board of Citizens for a Sound Economy, now called FreedomWorks, whose stated mission is "lower taxes, less government, more freedom."

Faced with opponents this powerful Navasky and his colleagues can do little, especially considering the rate hikes have already been passed and no one has a plan for undoing them. "I'm just trying to figure out if we're here wasting our time," an exasperated Cummings said at the hearing this week. The best the panel of postal authorities could offer was that it was for the sake of "discussion." For small periodicals, the only discussion is whether or not they'll have to shut their doors.

Jonathan Stein is a reporter in Mother Jones' Washington, D.C., bureau.



 

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This is another case of Big Corporations using their political influence (Time-Warner)to put competitors out of business. I guarantee to you the corporate periodicals DO NOT pay the full expense of their postal processing and delivery. I work for the Postal Service. They give volume discounts to the large customers. So they are not paying the FULL costs of the Postal Service as smaller periodicals are now being required to do. THEY ARE LYING! James Miller is known as a cutthroat Bush Appointee. He has stated on the record that the PO should be privatized. That PO workers are way overpaid, and our benefits should be cut. He is a Pro-Big Business, Anti-Union, Anti-Worker, Postal Hit Man. The Postal Service use to be considered a "Public Service" who's mission is to serve the American People. It was required just to break even, not to make a profit. But in the last 25 years it has been "corporationized" where it now focuses on SOLEY on NUMBER'S & PROFITS and not on service. Service will continue to decline and prices will continue to increase as they are now completely focused on PROFIT not service. A perfect example is street "collection boxes." Remember those big blue boxes that used to be on corners in your neighborhood and shopping centers, etc. where you could deposit a letter for pick up. ALL GONE NOW! Those boxes have all but disappeared because the Postal Service determined that the cost associated with picking up the mail at those boxes exceeded the money made from the postage on the letters in the boxes, and so they have eliminated them. Once again PROFIT not SERVICE was the major concern. Expect more of the same.
Posted by:GrapostNovember 3, 2007 7:05:02 AMRespond ^
Local pubs require little transportation and are of local interest. Large pubs, Newsweek, Time and Playboy, etc. Are national and only have local advertisements in them. Our local Pubs, hometown newspapers, church bullitians and such susport our intrests on a local homefront and should recieve the best rates. Rates for pubs should be based on both volume and zones. The more volume, the higher the rates. The more zones you cross, the higher the rate. Most mega pubs use multi printing houses to get good zone rates. Another rate could be ther "known office of publication", where there home office is. Playboys home is Chicago... Large Mailers will transport there pubs to local BMC's or even SCF's to get better zone rates. There should be a charge by volume at each additional entry office. Been a BMEU clerk and worked with "there class of mail". Thanks for hearing me. Joe
Posted by:joeNovember 3, 2007 9:17:26 AMRespond ^
This is just another big corporate rigging to run small business off the map. First it was get rid of the mom and pop motels, then the small discount gas stations, then the small grocery stores, then the small telephone, radio and t.v. and newspaper business. Then we ship most of our major industries out of the country. We have a bought and sold Congress that isn't worth a goddamn and it laughably tells us that all of this is good for the country. This isn't American anymore. You don't have to be a blind conservative not to see it, just an ignorant one to deny it.
Posted by:Dennis A. RiceNovember 3, 2007 4:13:04 PMRespond ^
When as a young man growing up in Illinois I remember my mother telling me when I'd ask for something...We can't afford it so we won't have it! If you can't afford it, then I guess you'll just have to do without.
Posted by:Howard BarrettNovember 4, 2007 3:20:09 PMRespond ^
There is no such thing as a free lunch. Once Congress subsidized the Postal Service. In 1970, Congress decided that mailers, not the public, should pay the costs, and the Postal Service should be operated in a business-like manner - and was supposed to break-even without public subsidies. But the rate advantage given to periodicals, especially small periodicals was unchanged.Large volume mailers get discounts because they do a lot of the work that the Postal Service would otherwise have to do. When Congress updated the postal law last year, the rules changed again. The Postal Service is now supposed to be profitable. The Postal Service is under tremendous pressure from Internet applications and is beginning to lose volume, but still must reach every address every day and costs continue to increase - the increase in transportation costs alone is staggering. Congress also decided that the Postal Service must be restricted to hard-copy mail - it has no place else to go for the money except to the users. All the users must pay their way - the traditional "special rates" granted to some publications cannot be sustained - unless those costs are shifted to someone else, and no one else is volunteering to pay more so that small circulation publications can continue to have lower rates. These publications will adapt and figure out ways to be printed close to the point of delivery - the technology is in place in the printing industry - some will adapt and survive.
Posted by:WatchfulNovember 4, 2007 4:58:01 PMRespond ^
Many people might choose a paperless option for a full-fledged online pass. Then the mags could buy a lobbyist to help save internet rights and only mail out copies to those really still wanting paper. I got too much clutter, but if you can get me good stuff in an all-access online pass, that's cool. I can print out just the stories I want to save and they will have the online archives to search.
Posted by:kimNovember 4, 2007 5:39:25 PMRespond ^
No such thing as a free lunch? Oh, that's right, I forgot. It's the working class that must pay their way while their rulers get "free" healthcare, college tuition, transportation and other perks. I am sick of average "conservatives" beating the "smaller government" "pay your own way" drum. Can you name one currently prominent "conservative" politician that has done anything to bring about smaller government or fiscal responsibility? Just look at the Department of Defense if you want to see government spending run amok and rampant waste & corruption. Our current "conservative" government is the biggest spending government in the history of this nation. And laws - since these folks took control we have more, not fewer laws. Sheesh!
Posted by:ATXNovember 5, 2007 6:24:38 AMRespond ^
Oh well, sic transit libertas Americani. This right-wing BS mindset has infected everything, but the media should take some of the blame, since they were active in foisting Reagan, George HW Bush and especially this current disaster of a president, George Walker Bush, on us. And they're at it again, trying to impose another raging nutcase Repub, Rudy Giuliani, on us as well. Hey, maybe we won't have any newspapers or magazines or anything after a while. I mean, if it works for Myanmar and Pakistan....
Posted by:LippincottNovember 5, 2007 6:50:06 AMRespond ^
If you really want information as to how the rates are structured and tilt to large mailers, contact President Burrus of the APWU. He has been fighting corporate bias and privatization in the Postal Service for a lot of years. A lot of years, and it is a struggle. As a former-retired-postal worker, I am aware.
Posted by:Robert N. HoreyNovember 5, 2007 7:14:43 AMRespond ^
I wonder how many people remember what this country was, and what it is now? The corporate elite are in total control of what we read and hear; they own the presidency and congress; they allow toys to come into this country that poses a serious health hazard to children ; they are allowed to fight a war, in which any horrible action they do, is immune from prosecution; they are allowed to look at our mail, search are insurance and bank records; and sell the United Citizen out for pure greed.Where is the America that my father fought for in WWII? In fact, where is America? This place, in which, I live is foreign to me. I wish I lived in Canada, but it is hard to get through the borders, unlike it is in the US. I guess there are not corporate moguls in Canada, or they don't need to suck the life out of people from other countries.
Posted by:Vicki LawsonNovember 5, 2007 7:32:20 AMRespond ^
If they want the post office to make a profit, why not let Coca-Cola, McDonalds and Toyota put paid ads on stamps? Then make the paid ad stamps available to anyone for free or at a reduced rate after the post office covers it's costs plus a tiny profit. This could be a "win-win-win" for small publications, big business and the general public.
Posted by:Ben Franklin's brainNovember 5, 2007 8:47:02 AMRespond ^
As a ratepayer, I am strongly for all classes of mail covering their attributable costs. The Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act requires this. To those small periodic als, form a coop to reduce your costs like other small mailers of other classes of mail do. Cross-subsidation of mail is prohibited now so learn to deal with the new rules or go out of business. It has nothing to do with politics or Big Corporations but how the new law works. All I hear about this from other commentors is their political talk and not the reality of the situation. It doesn't matter who appointed whom but what the law says. Either join the program or get left behind. Yes it is a win-win for us ratepayers who were subsidizing periodicals in the past. I am glad they are required to pay their fair share. No the founding fathers did not seek cheaper rates for periodicals just to ensure that periodicals can be mailed through the US Mails. That is what their concern was back then.
Posted by:common senseNovember 5, 2007 11:13:42 AMRespond ^
"I would say if they cannot cover their costs, it is a win-win situation," said Miller. "Let me tell you why I think that. Because other classes of mail would be covering their costs." He went on to explain that every American letter writer pays 200 percent of the cost of shipping his or her letter because small magazines and periodicals don't pay their fair share." Change "small magazines" to "corporations" & it sounds kinda like the current tax code.
Posted by:scoopyNovember 5, 2007 11:15:22 AMRespond ^
Are you saying that this rate hike which subscribers like myself at this point, have no recourse to this rate hike? Isn't there something we can do?
Posted by:Joel GordonNovember 5, 2007 11:17:05 AMRespond ^
small papers are the only news we get without interference from corporate managerment. we need them. another gift to the right wing, with plenty of money. we support them with taxs brakes
Posted by:johnbartoleroNovember 5, 2007 11:23:40 AMRespond ^
small papers are the only news we get without interference from corporate managerment. we need them. another gift to the right wing, with plenty of money. we support them with taxs brakes
Posted by:johnbartoleroNovember 5, 2007 11:24:17 AMRespond ^
I don't think subscribers should be affected in a sense. If you are paying for a subscription to a magazine, that subscription should easily cover the print and mail of the piece plus the feasibility and expenses of the business itself. If the publication says it doesn't, then what are they doing with the subscription $$ they are collecting? For those publications who take subscriptions, shutting down because of a postal increase shouldn't be an option.
Posted by:Makes CentsNovember 5, 2007 12:35:27 PMRespond ^
USPS: Going Out of Business Sale Isn't it the strategy of the USPS to run itself out of business? This year the USPS eliminated "Internation ground mail delivery service." The USPS goal is to privitize itself so that UPS, FedEx, and other special interests can have the business. The USPS Board is totally corrupted by the current political process with huge conflicts of interest.
Posted by:William DodgeNovember 5, 2007 1:01:44 PMRespond ^
My only problem with the current issue's ethanol graphic is the lack of documentation.
Posted by:Dan CoteNovember 5, 2007 1:16:53 PMRespond ^
I dont know, one part of me is saying if we have to pay rate increases year after year, why shouldnt everyone else. The other side is saying, big corps dont pay full fair, so why should the little companies. But as usual, its the little individual people who pay the bulk.
Posted by:livesipogNovember 5, 2007 1:36:20 PMRespond ^
in other countries, like Australia for one, local postal services are contracted out. Your local post office is privately owned and must meet requirements or they lose the right and someone else gets a chance at it. Often the people who deliver the mail are sub contractors to the indie owned post offices. The Fed still operates the moving of the mail across the country though. And it works really well there. I wonder if something like that wouldnt work here. After all, there are many contractors working for the US postal service. From moving the mail, to delivery, a lot of them are contract carriers. Maybe other services need to contracted out as well? Anyone can bid on these contracts. http://www.usps.com/communications/organization/contract-delivery.htm
Posted by:livesipogNovember 5, 2007 1:42:40 PMRespond ^
I am hearing a lot of complaining, but I'm not hearing any solutions. Does anyone out there know of anything that we can do to fight this?
Posted by:JanpacopeteNovember 5, 2007 2:00:04 PMRespond ^
What is this "mail" ? I use the internet.
Posted by:GarmanNovember 5, 2007 4:30:18 PMRespond ^
There needs to be a new service. Local stations that receive electronic files, print them locally and distribute them locally. Screw the PO.
Posted by:catjoNovember 5, 2007 10:12:05 PMRespond ^
if small periodicals rates are increased, would 'junk mail' rates also be increased? i wouldn't wish them to lose their income but i would consider it a slap in the face when i consider what they provide to 1. waste our natural resources, 2. waste my time just picking them up and throwing them out, 3. uselessly and abusively doubling or tripling the amount of waste going into the landfills that are threatening the amount of space on this planet that we can inhabit, just like we threaten the natural habitat of every non-human lifeform that we should be sharing the earth with. 3A. it's a good thing the production of their 'instant garbage' demands the clearing of the land. but this whole society is in total denial about the damage we are doing to OUR ENVIRONMENT! Earth doesn't need us to exist. We, however, all 3 or 8 billion of us, can not survive with out the earth, in good working order! i know 8 billion people might be an exageration now but it won't be for long.
Posted by:kathyNovember 5, 2007 10:34:17 PMRespond ^
Kim, you make a good point. and,really, those that want their pubs on paper can choose the option to print it themselves. they'll do it if they want it. i remember when friends of mine said they would quit smoking if the price of cigs reached a dollar. they're still smoking!
Posted by:kathyNovember 5, 2007 10:40:58 PMRespond ^
If you can afford it you can live longer. If you can't afford it, should you die? Apparently Mr Barrett thinks so. He may be right, so his idea deserves discussion on its merits. Any takers?
Posted by:Ed AuchterNovember 5, 2007 11:20:18 PMRespond ^
Now there is a great Idea.It's good for business and fr thepublic as well. We couls even go one step further and sell political ads on stamps! Nobody is harmed, as long as the ads are tasteful and honest. Hmmmmm, that may be a problem.
Posted by:Ed AuchterNovember 5, 2007 11:27:21 PMRespond ^
Another group that is forgotten are the small printing companies that print the small periodicals. They are hurting as well. The only ones getting a free lunch are the corps like Time-Warner. Then there is the USPS. The number of employees is dwindling. It's very scary when you have two kids and your husband has been with working for the Post Office for 25 years. He has seen what many are here are talking about and it has gotten much worse in the past 7 years.
Posted by:War Is Not Pro-LifeNovember 6, 2007 3:44:19 AMRespond ^
Mother Jones and The Nation pose a threat to the government run -news media because they are currently giving non- sensored news. Did you know that the head of the Board of Governors is the President of the United States and that all the political mailings from D.C. e.g.senators etc. are done so free of postal charge ??? (From your average citizen view of this)
Posted by:D-AnnaNovember 6, 2007 6:31:21 AMRespond ^
So I guess it will be mail for the ones willing to use an "EZ pass"... the other guy goes into that big lane on the right and pays alot more... or just stays home. And we no doubt now have a database somewhere that carefully tracks who subscribes to what and what mail went where... What would Ben Franklin throw into the conversation at one of these "hearings??"... or Tom Paine? I suspect they would be out in the hall on their blackberrys lining up the armed resistance... but wait, the NSA has that covered too...
Posted by:PileNovember 6, 2007 6:52:38 AMRespond ^
Why not simply raise bulk (junk) mail rates ? We subsidize a cheap way for trashy catalogues, etc., to be lugged around by overworked postal workers. Raising the bulk rate fee and separating catalogues and flyers from the publications category would be simpler. Also, if the private sector can do the job better, why not drop the junk mail postal class entirely? If privatized carriers can prove that they can deliver junk mail more efficiently than the USPS does, then terrific, let them. Call their bluff.
Posted by:scipio911November 6, 2007 8:00:23 AMRespond ^
D-Anna: "government run -news media" ? ... You mean PBS?
Posted by:MytoNovember 6, 2007 9:05:54 AMRespond ^
I agree with scipio--the USPS should drop junk mail altogether. Following 9/11 the Post Master General distributed a flyer warning not to accept any unsolicited mail--the USPS should not deliver bulk-rate mail, all of which is unsloicited (perhaps an exception could be made for non-profits?)
Posted by:chainNovember 6, 2007 11:35:04 AMRespond ^
As a printer and a mailer, no one is more acutely aware of the effects of postal increases. And as much as I would like to sit here and complain about the periodical (flats) increase, the bottom line is that you can't process it at high speed so it must bear a higher cost. It, like other rates, has been subsidized for years by first class mail rates. The cost of oil changed all of that. The easiest way to actually lower your postal cost is to fold it in half and insert it into a 6" by 9" envelope or tri-fold it with a tab. Yes, it isn't pretty with the folds in it, but your readers are content driven, not Aesthetics driven. They will adapt to the crease if postage is a problem. Making sure you can capitalize on zip+5 discounts or is you live in a fairly large city and only distribute to the counties surrounding that post office, the rates for what is know as SCF entry discount can signficantly lower your cost. Lastly, if you are producing on offset equipment, check out digital. Short run periodicals can be substially cheaper on digital machinery and recent advances makes it's quality very good. Work with a good printer/mailer and they can help keep your titles viable. They have a vested interest in it too. I guess the last line of defense if someone wants to take this to task is to ask whether government regulation changes of this kind violates free speech. Not a lawyer, so if someone is a constitutional lawyer, maybe we could have a ruling on this. Parris Printing, Nashville
Posted by:wadoryu4me@aol.comNovember 6, 2007 4:12:13 PMRespond ^
I have been publishing a small publication for a few years now. This essentially puts me out of business. Subscriptions in no way cover printing costs, and being a small operation there is no way I can hustle up more advertising money for my niche market. I have about 2500 subscribers. I have printing costs of about $7500 per issue. Add delivery onto that. I've drained my savings to keep it going, now no more. No one in congress, ESPECIALLY the Republicans do jack for small businesses. Over and done. Thank you Congress.
Posted by:BrianNovember 6, 2007 4:30:27 PMRespond ^
shouldn't someone sending requested mail (a small-sized publication) be able to get a rate similar to that offered to Wal-Mart to fill your mailbox with wasted unwanted mail?
Posted by:robNovember 7, 2007 12:51:04 PMRespond ^
WHO WROTE THE PATRIOT ACT?
Posted by:martinchillNovember 7, 2007 4:08:10 PMRespond ^
A number of scientific journals really publish only on the web/.pdf for mortals. There is a print edition, for which institutions pay lots.
Posted by:baldvinlawNovember 7, 2007 8:26:17 PMRespond ^
Do you really think US Magazine deserves that cut in postage rates? What about Entertainment Weekly? Or even JPG Magazine? This isn't a free press issue anymore...
Posted by:Laura MoncurNovember 8, 2007 3:08:07 PMRespond ^
So, these small publishers go out of business. Most couldn't make it without massive advertising support. Why subsidize advertisers or support a publication which is 80% ads and very little meat. I already get pissed and feedup when I get a Sunday Paper which costs me three times as much as the daily and consist of nothing more that advertising. Quit your crying and publish a blog,its cheaper and you get feedback from your readers. Screw the Postal Service their eventually going out like the Edsel.
Posted by:bendinriverNovember 10, 2007 6:52:16 AMRespond ^
I very rarely use the poatal service any more,I sent a box to the Vets for $297.00 and they never recieved it.I can't trust them.I take Fex Ex over US Postal Service.
Posted by:Donna Marie HerbigNovember 10, 2007 9:59:09 PMRespond ^
I have even had my mail scan and but into catologs.
Posted by:Donna Marie HerbigNovember 10, 2007 10:03:40 PMRespond ^
I feel the same as you, I keep saying to my husband that I wish I had been born in the 30s. It hurt to know that we raise our childen the best we can just to have people like this change there minds,with dishonest solutions on how to get ahead.
Posted by:Donna Marie HerbigNovember 10, 2007 10:14:08 PMRespond ^
I have live in Nothern Calif.for 17 years just to watch it go to ---- just like Southern Calif did.The goverement must have alot of money to be able to put plastic trash bags up and down our beaches so we can pick up our dogs mess, use it in your car for trashbags and more. Now thats over spending. We were a little town once but the big boys and girls camein to town.
Posted by:Donna Marie HerbigNovember 10, 2007 10:28:35 PMRespond ^
As long as we all stick together on this issure we will come up with a solution.We the people for the people just don't lose sight of the American Dream. Its out there , we cannot let our country down now nor ever she has been there for us, now she needs us. We cannot let her die.
Posted by:Donna Marie HerbigNovember 10, 2007 10:47:21 PMRespond ^
I now pay bills and donate $$ to progressive NGO's on the internet. The USPS can go to hell for all I care.
Posted by:Richard ConnNovember 11, 2007 6:56:55 PMRespond ^
Soon After WWII, Sen McCarthy, Rep. Nixon and the rest of that pro/con gang, disposed of "In-Fact" and "P.M". Then went on to persecute Hollywood and other liberals. They don't care how long it takes, but Fascism will come.
Posted by:Frank LiebNovember 12, 2007 10:16:14 AMRespond ^
If it's going to be a "if you can't afford it, don't send it" system, then all publications should be scaled and treated equally. The larger publications should not be given preferential treatment while the smaller publications are given a rate hike. It's kind of like having rich people have benefits like healthcare while poor people have to pay a premium out of their pocket to see a doctor -- get it?
Posted by:mvmavenNovember 13, 2007 11:37:35 AMRespond ^
Perhaps you've missed the point. Voices are silenced. Free press--just what is that supposed to mean to you?
Posted by:cheyenneNovember 14, 2007 8:26:08 AMRespond ^
you have my vote for postmaster!!!
Posted by:cheyenneNovember 14, 2007 8:46:58 AMRespond ^
This rate hike seems to me to be a threat to the most interesting and bipartisan publications. I find it obscene that political influence can destroy the freedom of speech that so many have died for.
Posted by:Linda T SchneiderNovember 14, 2007 6:57:01 PMRespond ^
I couldn't have said it better than ATX. Just in case all the rest of you are under 30 years of age, I am 59 and anglo at that. However, recently I started really looking at the Democratic Presidential candidates and really like Barack Obama. He MIGHT change things back if he gets elected. Y'all (yes, I'm a southerner) take a look at his website. If you haven't already. By the way, I love each and every one of you. Grandma
Posted by:GrandmaNovember 17, 2007 3:43:06 PMRespond ^
"Common Sense" (not) -- I sure like Ben Franklin's Brain's idea better than yours. His language, too. Who are you to tell people to "deal with" anything? Sorry, Bud. I'm not dealin'. (Hey, I did say "sorry"). We really do need to try to be civil with each other; we're all in this mess together.
Posted by:Liz UrsittiNovember 17, 2007 3:48:39 PMRespond ^
Privatization of public services is a major goal of neo-Nazi fascist corporations. They have succeeded in many respects. Schools are expected to be profitable. Hospitals must turn profits. Libraries barely survive now. Museums are increasingly expected to be profitable. Capitalism has turned into a religion of profits. The only problem is that a profit comes at someone or something's expense. In this facet, capitalism expectantly leads to elitist rule because those receiving the profits don't want to share, so they consolidate power amongst one another and try to assert some form of governmental control and propaganda machine. I would say that we are nearing the end of the democratic republic of the United States of America and are half a century closer to the nationalized "socialism" of Nazi Germany. We need some real smaller government socialists to begin speaking up. Corporations must be held accountable. If it gets the rights of a citizen, then it should be held liable for all the things a citizen can be held liable for: abuse, homicide, negligence, gross misconduct, etc. And ultimately, the death sentence for corporations for the worst crimes should be revocation of the charter and public dissolution/absorption of said assets. This plan alone would take the steam out of the American "aristocracy".
Posted by:Mark DLNovember 18, 2007 6:02:26 PMRespond ^
Did the advertisers also have a rate hike? I am so sick of the daily delivery of advertising. Every day three or four catalogues that I just toss. What a waste of resources. I somehow suspect that catalogues aren't chared the same as the small publications such as The Nation.
Posted by:Margo MacrtneyNovember 19, 2007 1:50:07 PMRespond ^
There should never be favoratism in rates for periodicals. Publications with all views should be allowed to be mailed at a fair and equal rate. A larger publication should not get any special rites.
Posted by:star555November 19, 2007 3:46:41 PMRespond ^
How about we raise the rates on junk mail? About $100 per item whould suit me fine.
Posted by:Larry DillonNovember 21, 2007 1:22:22 PMRespond ^
"Every American letter writer pays 200 percent of the cost of shipping his or her letter because small magazines and periodicals don't pay their fair share." Great news! That means the price of a first class letter will be dropped back to a "fair share" price of 21 cents! Right?
Posted by:HalNovember 25, 2007 4:32:06 PMRespond ^
The USPS is huge machine, (the third largest employer in the United States) requiring massive amounts of money to run it. The problem is as rates for the average joe go up, more joes decide to email and pay their bills on the internet. As more joes use the internet, the USPS receives less income and must increase its rates some more. This rate increase encourages more joes to use the internet, and even less income for the USPS and so on. The only way for the USPS to get out of this vicious cycle is to get income from other sources, such as small periodicals. Now I know this is going to make some people mad (so don't go postal on me, haha) but when I hear people say the solution is for the government to subsidize it, it reminds me of the dumb blond who was told she was overdrawn and her reply was "That can't be, I still have plenty of blank checks".
Posted by:RaulDecember 1, 2007 6:57:45 AMRespond ^
The Bush regime threatening the independent press? How shocking!! Let's see, we are supposed to be surprised that the incompetent boobs that the Emperor and Darth Vader appoint have no concern about the free press, particularly the independent, non-Murdoch press, in fact want to silence it? Really now! I suppose you want me to believe that Bush v. Gore was not a case decided on law, not political leanings and that there were no weapons of mass destruction, too, right? Come on January 20, 2009!!!
Posted by:The Scarlet PimpernelDecember 1, 2007 1:51:35 PMRespond ^
What about the internet? Actually mailing publications cannot be as important today as it was 200 years ago. If a person wants a paper copy of a small (or large) publication, they must either put up with more ads or pay more in subscription. If a person merely supports the free flow of ideas, they should stop by the website.
Posted by:AdamDecember 4, 2007 7:57:25 PMRespond ^
This is very bad, I may not like what conservative papers are pushing, but sometimes I do, most of us have a mixed set of beliefs and priorities, we are not ALL left or right - but I do believe the whole point of democracy is that we can discuss all ideas, and we cant do that if there are no publications playing the other tune - watch out Internet they are probably dying to get their hands on you next !!! "Less government" ?? - that only means less of whatever controls the opposition is trying to levy. Less controls in general always means the 'heavies' get control - eg Big Oil stay alert - the 'should' brigade are alive and well.
Posted by:Veronica RoachDecember 11, 2007 5:15:35 AMRespond ^
I too am confused by the PURPOSE of the postal service. I understood that it was sold (privatized) some years back and I can't who OWNS it. Am I looking in the wrong places?
Posted by:Robert JeffriesMay 14, 2008 1:02:52 PMRespond ^

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