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Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Post# 187 - My Proposal to Governor Snyder

I sent this to our Governor on 2/6/2011.

Dear Governor Snyder,

Somewhere, as I type this, someone is committing a felony.  Within a year, they will hopefully be sentenced to reside in one of our 40 federal prisons, along with over 50,000 others.  I didn’t ask them to choose a life of crime.  I didn’t ask for my share of the over $30,000 in taxpayer dollars per inmate that we must pay every year.

Therefore, I’d like to see a little return on my investment. 

I hate the idea of people relaxing in their cells, drinking toilet tank wine concoctions crafted from ketchup and fruit cocktail.  I’ve always been a fan of chain gangs.  When Governor Engler was in office, I suggested the “Behave or Pave” program – inmates fixing our constantly damaged roads.

Another idea that I’ve been considering involves recycling.  Many of us sort our garbage—paper, plastic, aluminum is set aside for recycling.  Not everyone does it.  Not everyone does it effectively.  Why not have the inmates sort our garbage.  There’s plenty of garbage and plenty of inmates.  Just a thought.

More importantly, I’m assuming inmates have health care.  I’m also assuming it’s costly, and probably better than what I, with my two technical degrees, am able to provide for my family.  Here are the tentposts to my idea:

  • It’s a commonly known fact that exercise improves health. 
  • Healthy inmates will require less medical attention and be more able to defend themselves in the classic “shower confrontations” that we all hear about.
  • Stationary bikes provide exercise in confined spaces (like prison cells).
  • Generators can be connected to exercise bikes, and provide resistance.
  • Power collected from stationary bike generators can be used to power society.

Here’s some quick math:

1)      There are roughly 4.5 million households in Michigan, according to 2010 census.
2)      An average household consumes 45 kWh per day.
3)      Michiganders, on average, consume 202,500,000 kWh per day.
4)      If each inmate were required to “burn” 1500 calories a day (500 before each meal), they’d collectively burn roughly 88 of these kWh per day.

Does the math make any sense?  Not in the least—they’d only power about two households.  However, once the word gets out on the street, nobody’s going to want to get sentenced to a lifetime of peddling.  And a healthy, able body doesn't require as much medical attention and can sort through our garbage more effectively.

Give it some thought!


From http://thehermanletters.blogspot.com/
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Friday, November 27, 2009

Post # 52 - Yoplait and Their Smelly Pink Lids - November 9, 2009



Dear Yoplait,

I think it’s great that you’re offering to donate $.10 per pink yogurt lid, if we clean them off and send them in. You’ve agreed to donate at least $500K, and up to $1.5 Million. Nice work--give one another a pat on the back.

Here’s my question—what role do the lids actually have in all of this, other than raise awareness of your very noble initiative? It can be a real inconvenience—if I’m at work having a lovely Yogurt breakfast, I have to save the lid, go to the washroom, wash it off, dry it off, put it in my pocket, and remember to pull it out before I throw my pantalones into the washer. Then, I have to take all of the lids, put them in an envelope, take them out of the envelope because you can’t address the envelope legibly with the lids in there, then add the stamp—oh but postage went up and I don’t have a 3 cent stamp, so now I’m using two stamps.

What do you do with the lids? Is this also a recycling initiative? I’d bet they’re smelly by the time you receive them. Some people’s “cleaning” process is just licking them.

Bottom line: You (Yoplait) know, based on inventories and orders, how many Yogurts are purchased. Why wouldn’t you make it easier on everyone and say “We’ll donate $0.10 per yogurt that you purchase, not to exceed $1.5 Million. Eat up, America!” Then, the act of enjoying the yogurt is the thing driving the initiative, and not the licking, saving, and mailing of smelly pink lids.

Sincerely,

Jerry
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Date: Wed, 11 Nov 2009 12:09:53 -0600
Subject: Your Response From "General Mills" - 2009/11/11-1005 ZJC

Dear Jerry:
Thank you for contacting General Mills regarding . We appreciate the time you have taken to share your comments.  The information you provided will be shared with members of the promotion team.
Once the lids have been received and counted, they are sent to be recycled.
We hope you will continue to participate in our promotions.
 
Sincerely,
 
Jenni
Consumer Services
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