News   Dec 23, 2025
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PM Mark Carney's Canada

That's the scary thing though, if Russia moves on Poland then the world goes boom. And we think it's bad now. /bleh
England would definitely be on Poland's side. Polish is the second most commonly spoken language in England and Wales, with over 612,000 speakers, following English. During and after WWII, many Polish immigrants ended up in England. It has become prominent due to significant Polish migration to the UK in recent years, because of the war in Ukraine.
 
Canada Post and CUPW have reached tentative agreements in late 2025, with ratification votes scheduled for early 2026, but the exact dates depend on finalizing language for short-term disability and personal days, expected by January 16, 2026, after which the vote process will commence.

The workers have to look over their shoulders at this...

Digital age brings Denmark’s postal service to a historic end​

From https://www.cnn.com/2025/12/30/europe/denmark-postal-service-letters-intl-scliv

Denmark’s state-run postal service, PostNord, will deliver its last ever letter on Tuesday (December 30, 2025), as the digital age brings its 400-year-run to an end. This makes Denmark the first country in the world to decide that physical mail is no longer either essential or economically viable.

The precipitous decline of a national postal service is a familiar story, one echoed elsewhere in the Western world as we rely ever more heavily on digital means of communication.
Denmark’s postal service delivered more than 90% fewer letters in 2024 than in 2000. The US Postal Service delivered 50% less mail in 2024 than in 2006.

And as our correspondence has moved largely online – transfiguring into WhatsApp messages, video calls, or just an exchange of memes – our communication and language have changed accordingly.

Letters themselves “will change status” too, often coming to represent more intimate messages than their digital counterparts, said Dirk van Miert, a professor at the Huygens Institute in the Netherlands who specializes in early modern knowledge networks.

The knowledge networks that letters facilitated for centuries are “only expanding” in their online form, expediting both access to that knowledge as well as the rise of disinformation, he told CNN.

No more mailboxes​

PostNord has been removing the 1,500 mailboxes scattered across Denmark since June. When it sold them off to raise money for charity on December 10, hundreds of thousands of Danes tried to buy one. For each mailbox, they paid either 2,000 ($315) or 1,500 ($236) Danish krone, depending on how worn they were.

Instead of posting letters, Danes will now have to drop them off at kiosks in shops, from where they will be couriered by private company DAO to both domestic and international addresses. PostNord will continue delivering parcels, however, as online shopping remains ever popular.

Denmark is one of the world’s most digital nations; even its public sector utilizes several online portals, minimizing any physical government correspondence and making it much less reliant on postal services than many other countries.

“Almost every Dane is fully digital, meaning physical letters no longer serve the same purpose as previously,” Andreas Brethvad, PostNord Denmark’s public affairs and communications director, told CNN. “Most communication now arrives in our electronic mailboxes, and the reality today is that e-commerce and the parcel market far outweigh traditional mail.”

That may explain why it is the first country to make these changes, though it seems likely others will eventually follow. Van Miert, who lives in the Netherlands, said he had to go to a shop to post letters because there are no longer any mailboxes in his town.
Still, the need for physical correspondence continues around the world, even if it is diminished. Almost 2.6 billion people remain offline, according to the UN-affiliated Universal Postal Union, and many more “lack meaningful connectivity,” thanks to inadequate devices, poor coverage and limited digital skills. Rural communities, women and those living in poverty are among the worst affected, it added.

And even in countries like Denmark, some groups who are more reliant on postal services, like older people, may be adversely affected by the changes, advocacy groups say.

“It’s very easy for us to access our mail on the phone or a website… but we forgot to give the same possibilities to those who are not digital,” said Marlene Rishoej Cordes, a spokesperson for the DaneAge Association, which advocates for older people.

She told CNN that DAO, the new postal courier, has a service where it will collect mail at a home address but “it still demands you are digital because you have to pay for this service and you can only pay digitally.”
 
England would definitely be on Poland's side. Polish is the second most commonly spoken language in England and Wales, with over 612,000 speakers, following English. During and after WWII, many Polish immigrants ended up in England. It has become prominent due to significant Polish migration to the UK in recent years, because of the war in Ukraine.
...er..I think my point was that attacking a NATO ally (to which Poland is part of) is declaring war on all NATO allies to my understanding. It would be the same thing if the US used militarily force to take over Greenland (also a NATO ally). Since both Russia and the US are heavily nuclear armed countries I am not sure I need to explain what will happen in the inevitable if NATO sticks with this principle militarily. So let's hope this will never happen. Ever.
 
Since both Russia and the US are heavily nuclear armed countries I am not sure I need to explain what will happen in the inevitable if NATO sticks with this principle militarily. So let's hope this will never happen. Ever

Nothing because Trump will tell NATO to stuff it and side with Russia.
 

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