
The makers of Fallout 4 have apparently decided everybody should be able to find these oddities. The last game, Fallout: New Vegas, had a trait you could choose at the beginning of the game to make things sillier and stranger. Every installment has included at least one flying saucer, for example.
FALLOUT 4 SECRET DELIVERY SERIES
The Fallout series has always included some wacky extra material for its fans. As you make your way through the Commonwealth, you have to decide the fate of the three factions that are vying for control of the new world.
FALLOUT 4 SECRET DELIVERY FULL
Instead, it's full of mutants, robots, and airships. You play as the Sole Survivor - a person who wakes up in Boston 210 years after the Great War. Fallout 4 debuted way back in 2015, when total nuclear annihilation seemed like a wacky sci fi premise and not a distinct possibility. Only no one in Ottawa seems willing to admit it.The thing about open world games is that they never stop offering up new secrets. Perhaps the mail needn’t be one thing, needn’t provide one identical service, to all Canadians. Perhaps some mad genius might discover a guaranteed way to transport a letter from A on Monday to B on Tuesday, within the same city or perhaps even beyond, for less than $26. Thus a lot of people would be annoyed whatever Canada Post decided to do.Īt no point has anyone in a position to effect change come along and suggested that perhaps Canadians might have a choice in their mail service: Daily home delivery, maybe twice-daily (!), maybe on Saturdays and Sundays (!!), for those willing to pay for it and cheaper options for those who aren’t. Anecdotally speaking, it seems roughly 50 per cent of Canadians who receive home delivery and give a crap about the mail prefer that idea to cutting home delivery entirely. There were other ways Canada Post could have achieved similar and desperately needed cost savings: Cutting down on delivery days, for example. It nevertheless highlights the innovation vacuum in which the debate is transpiring. Or this is just a really, really dumb, politically advantageous way to be seen defending his constituents’ entitlements. But perhaps it’s worth suing to check.) Or, Coderre thinks Canadians who enjoyed home delivery as of December 2013 should on principle enjoy different and greater human rights than their fellow citizens. (I presume it doesn’t violate my human rights to have to fetch my mail from a box in the lobby - which is to say to periodically transfer its contents into the adjacent recycling bin. But all those other things.)Įither Denis Coderre spent 16 years in the House of Commons, nine of them in government and five as a cabinet minister, without noticing that Canada Post was depriving roughly one-third of the Canadian population of its human rights by delivering their mail to lockboxes as opposed to their front doors or lobbies. (OK, not the UN Convention Against Torture. Thus Montreal Mayor Denis Coderre, among other chief magistrates, has thrown in his lot with a Canadian Union of Postal Workers lawsuit alleging that eliminating home delivery would violate Section 15 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the federal Human Rights Act, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, the UN Convention Against Torture and Canada Post’s obligations to Universal Postal Union. It is one thing for politicians representing the affected communities to make themselves look selfish and silly on this file.


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