Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Government”
The Post Office Is Running Out of Money
The US Postal Service lost $9 billion in 2025 and has now warned it could exhaust its funds within twelve months. This is a structurally familiar story — mail volume declining, pension obligations compounding, the universal service mandate requiring delivery everywhere regardless of cost — but the twelve-month clock is new and specific.
USPS occupies a strange position in American infrastructure. It’s simultaneously indispensable to rural communities, pharmaceutical deliveries, ballot returns, and small-business shipping, and also chronically incapable of covering its own costs. Privatization discussions always die on the political vine because the math of profitable postal service requires abandoning the places that need it most. Subsidization discussions die because “bailing out the post office” is an easy campaign attack. The result is an institution that staggers forward indefinitely, absorbing losses, until a number like “twelve months” finally forces a decision that the political system has been deferring for a generation.
The Post Office Might Run Out of Money in 12 Months
The US Postal Service, which lost $9 billion in 2025, has warned it could exhaust its available funds within 12 months. The warning is not hypothetical — it’s the agency’s own projection, based on current revenue trends and cost structures.
USPS is in a structural bind that has no obvious exit. Mail volume has been declining for two decades as digital communication replaced physical correspondence. Package delivery, which was supposed to compensate, has become intensely competitive with UPS, FedEx, and Amazon’s own logistics network. Meanwhile, USPS is legally required to deliver to every address in the country six days a week — a universal service obligation that its competitors do not share.
The Doge Cuts Nobody Is Talking About
The loudest DOGE cuts get the most coverage. The quietest ones may matter more.
Everyone has heard about the high-profile reductions — agency headcounts, foreign aid freezes, federal contractor reviews. These generate headlines because they involve large numbers and familiar institutions. But buried in the actual budget documents are cuts that will reshape how the US government functions at a granular level, and most of them are not being discussed.