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Thread: Are the boxes at a Post Office, safety deposit boxes for the Republic ?

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  1. #2
    Have you ever noticed motla68 that a United States Post Office (the only two items left in the constitution besides the military) that on the building you don’t have an address?

    I checked out eight United States Post Offices in two counties and found that three (satellite) had addresses and five did not, (see it above the lady in the picture) only zip codes were displayed on the real United States Post Offices buildings.

    Now look in or on the bolted mailbox on a real United States Post Office (not a satellite building of the corporate USPS) property and compare that with the building address with the mailbox……amazing difference.

    That PO Box (pictured): open one up (not in you’re name) and pay for it in a United States Postal Money Order and ask the postal clerk at least of a grade 7 who do I make the United States Postal Money Order to… listen to that answer.

    The establishment of the money order system is concededly within the constitutional powers wherein the Government is vested with the right to "establish Post Offices and post Roads." Const. art. 1, § 8, cl. 7.

    It is incident to the paramount right of Congress to maintain a post office system. While the growth of the money order system may have assumed some aspects of commercial banking, it must nevertheless be characterized as a function of sovereignty and not a commercial operation. The operation of the post office system, with its many innovations inaugurated to meet a great public need, does not divest it of its character of sovereignty.

    United States v. Northwestern Nat. Bank & Trust Co., 35 F. Supp. 484 - Dist. Court, Minnesota 1940
    Last edited by Chex; 10-02-11 at 02:46 PM.

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