Helping Stop US Postal Service Junk Mail. "No thanks you throw it away!"

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
447 views
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Ratings have been disabled for this video.

Uploaded by on Jun 11, 2010

Do you get a lot of junk mail you throw out? don't through it away... send it back.. most companys send a no postage necessary if mailed in the US. If you send it back in the envelope they give you they end up paying for the mail. "I call this the No thanks you throw this away."

http://www.moneybluebook.com/how-to-stop-receiving-paper-junk-mail-and-save-t...

Link to this comment:

Share to:

Uploader Comments (BrainEatingZomb1e)

  • what pisses me off the most is election time(like ...now)...cause then i start getting junk mail from greasy politicians, i've gotten at least 38 pounds of the crap in the last week.......i dont know what trying to send it back would do in their case....im not even sure it would be legal....i could go to jail over junk mail, anyway , they use that real heavy card stock and paying postage on that would cost me more than the s.o.b. is going to steal, i use reg. junk as collage paper in my artwork

  • @777Marlene yep i know what you mean i get alot of stuff like that too... i think if you write return to sender on it legally they have to send it back.. I know you can't do that with "saturation mailing" That is like resedentual stuff

  • very good idea. kind of reminds me of the deal my dad use to give telemarketers that called during dinner hour. he'd get their #'s & call them back during inappropriate hours. haha

  • @lifewithbeenie hehe i love telemarketers.. those are fun calls..

  • But, then you are giving the workers for the company (people like you and me) a harder job to do. If they are sending you credit card apps, then you have good credit and that's something to be proud of. Just say'n. . . .-Steve-

  • @OceanTownPictures well true, but if you think of it in the grand scheme of things it would be more feasable for them to sned out 1 letter every 3 to 6 months not every week. The average American household receives unsolicited junk mail equivalent to 1.5 trees every year, which comes out to more than 100 million trees for all U.S. households combined – the equivalent of deforesting the U.S. Rocky Mountain National Park every four months. <--found it online.. sounds about right though.

see all

All Comments (38)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • Glad to hear that many people utilize the return envelopes. I usually send them back photocopied magazine articles (what else am I going to do at work?!?); maybe the minimum-wage-earner at the other end will have something to read, LOL. Many people erroneously believe in the ol' brick in a box trick, but according to Post Office Domestic Mail Manual code 8.4.6, "In cases where a BRM card or letter is used improperly as a label, the USPS treats the item as waste."

  • Yeah, there is so much paper wastage with mail. I hate all the ads and junk mail.

  • This plan is soooo crazy....it JUST MIGHT WORK !!

  • @BrainEatingZomb1e Didn't think about the trees and all the waist. I would guess these companies are not recycling the returned mail either. Yes, in the grand scheme of things, you are absolutely right! Americans are wasteful. So, how can we stop these companies from doing this? As one of the little guys, I feel powerless. -Steve-

  • @chrisbogdan hehe yep one of my co-workers told me he got a old shoe box and put bricks in it and taped the envelope to the top and sent it back.. lol thats alittle extreeme hehe but i guess if it works it works..haha

  • Sounds like a good idea to me

  • Not a bad idea! LOL

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more