<blockquote>"The countless banking and insurance ads in junk mail are annoying. They are also annoying in the paper, in the magazines, on the radio, on billboards and in TV."</blockquote>
Yes, but people CHOOSE to buy the newspapers, magazines and the TV sets. What's so complex about that point?
<blockquote>"Ready to stop getting certain information from your city, county and state? Ready to see your favorite charity take a huge hit? Ditto for your church."</blockquote>
Charities and political candidates are exempt from the national do-not-call registry. Life is so much nicer now that we have that law, even with those exemptions.
I get the feeling you're a professional complexifier.
If you want to stop your junk mail, do it. The corporate big wigs who are making money by making your life miserable only succeed at this because we don't stop it. Don't wait for "a bill to pass" or whatever, get on your phone and call the companies who fill your mailbox. It took almost two years but I finally stopped all incoming "junk mail". And yes, without question it was the most mindless, frustrating endeavor, but I had enough. (It was the morning I went out to my mail box and couldn't open it because of all the "junk mail" that set me on the war-path with junk mailers.
Consumers have to know that no one is going to stop your junk mail; if you want it done, do it yourself. Each and every shred of paper that came to my house, I'd call the company and demand that they take me off their mailing list as well as any list they "rent or sell". Unfortunately this does not stop it immediately - they take your name off and continue to send mail to "or current resident". Call again. It will stop. You may have to call once or twice "to remind them", but stay on it and you will be junk free.
I can't tell you how wonderful it is to have an empty mailbox. Not one shred of unwanted mail comes to my house or "current resident".
People (or companies) only have the power we give them. Take the power back and send them on their way ...
This may be a very good place to follow the money. Who benefits most if junk mail were to disappear? Might it be newspapers? Traditionally, newspapers have editorialized against junk mail.
There are all sorts of reasons why junk mail is an annoyance and certainly the way it is used could be improved. The vitriol and ridicule along with the fraudulent "evidence" used by professional lobbyists on both sides of all sorts of issues, that is seeping into this dialog is disturbing, though.
may i make a few points?
the countless banking and insurance ads in junk mail are annoying. They are also annoying in the paper, in the magazines, on the radio, on billboards and in TV. Those ads have annoyances specific to the medium but it is not the medium that makes them annoying.
contrary to vague statement above that the DMA's Do not mail list was difficult to use, in fact, it takes only a phone call or a letter to use.
junk mail is effective. Were it not, people would spend their ad dollars elsewhere. some more effective, some less. Mailers would love to send less and targetting skills are growing. You will see more and more smaller, more effective mailings.
junk mail works for some industries and campaigns and is weak or bad for others. The ad agency for the post office doesn't get that. The post office campaigns to promote junk mail are in the bad category.
in my opinion the post office should fill a need not create a need to fill. Ads and PR that create awareness are good, ones that promote the use of mail, not so hot. (However ditto with airline subsidies that hurt rail, junk food subsidies that profit fast food's rapid employee turn-over, etc.
it is worse, though. The new rates in periodicals favor large mailers like Time-Warner at the expense of small mailers like your state's magazine or small newsletters. Not so good but TW wrote the law, basically, so what should we expect.
Recycling: the communities that don't recycle should with or without junk mail. All sorts of household and office paper are carried to the recycling center. Mail is just a part of it. a lot of the tax dollars used to recycle come rromo business who get their business from junk mail.
it would be nice to be able to stop getting certain pieces of mail. Try the Do Not Mail registrar. It'll stop some after a couple of months. Want to stop a whole class of mail?like Standard (what used to be known as third class for the most part)? Ready to stop getting certain information from your city, county and state? Ready to see your favorite charity take a huge hit? Ditto for your church.
it is a complex issue. The solutions are available but take thought. Remember the law of unintended consequences. Everything we do, along with maybe solving our problem, has a consequence we never intended.
Jewish Liberals to Launch A Counterpoint to AIPAC
Washington Post, April 15, 2008
"... several prominent Israeli figures, as well as activists who have raised money for the [[Democracy Alliance]] and [[MoveOn.org]], are also involved. ..."
[[Tom Matzzie]] is the political lobbyist and strategist for MoveOn and for [[Campaign to Defend America]] with [[Wes Boyd]] the MoveOn founder.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/04/14/AR2008041402647.html
Jewish Liberals to Launch A Counterpoint to AIPAC
Washington Post, April 15, 2008
"... several prominent Israeli figures, as well as activists who have raised money for the [[Democracy Alliance]] and [[MoveOn.org]], are also involved. ..."
[[Tom Matzzie]] is the political lobbyist and strategist for MoveOn and for [[Campaign to Defend America]] with [[Wes Boyd]] the MoveOn founder.
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