ANSWERS: 10
  • The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, DC 20500 No way of really knowing if he got it. Since he doesnt really read his mail....
  • Vice President Richard Cheney: vice_president@whitehouse.gov
  • as i have staed they actually dont read there email, mail they pay people to to read them, if you actuall want to know if it work send a threatening letter(not recommended) and see if the fbi knocks on your door. Im sure they read them if he actually recieves them is a question. Maybe probably not,.
  • About 15 years ago the Reader's Digest reported that 20,000 people write to the President every day. This was by snail mail! With e-mail it's probably much more nowadays.
  • This is a link that I found on the internet. I hope it works.http://capwiz.com/advofy/mail/?id=20004&type=PR&lvl=F
  • Use the format for a business letter. The greeting should say "Dr. Mr. President," Express your thoughts politely and concisely. It will probably be taken more seriously if you use proper grammar and spelling. Send your letter in a business-sized envelope to President [first and last name] 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue Washington, D.C. 20500 The President's staff will read and respond to your letter (if it includes YOUR address, which is part of the business format.) You will likely get a form letter written of official White House Stationery.
  • There is no way to get him to read it. Page's and what not read the mail, and unless its dire throw it away. Sorry.
  • The unintended consequences. I did that many years ago because my boss was using my government employees in his body shop. When I complained to him that they were paid by the government, he told me to mind my own business. I requested an interview with his boss and was told to mind my own business. The further up the line, the less response I got. I got mad and wrote my congressional representative and the president of the U.S. The end was, my boss and all of his bosses were transferred and I got a red tag on my military record. I was told that the tag was good and bad for me. The good was that I would probably never be thrown out of the Navy, the bad was that I would never be promoted. The moral is that if you write the the President, be prepared for an answer.
  • If you don't have on already, it will probably cause you to have an FBI file started on you.
  • I've read all the comments above and they all seem good. However, I believe in hope. He may not personally read all "20,000" of them in one day obviously, and he will certainly have paid staff that reads his mail for him, but I certainly "HOPE" that at least one of his staff is compassionate enough to read my letter and respond, even if they don't help. A response at least acknowledges recepit and is polite. I also think that if you want something bad enough to write the President of the United States, nothing should stop you from believing you wouldn't get a response. faith works wonders.

Copyright 2023, Wired Ivy, LLC

Answerbag | Terms of Service | Privacy Policy