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bayernmadl  |
| headless49(at)web(dot)de |
Ort: Bayern |
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Huhu Gisy!
Du hast ja eine supertolle homepätsch
kannst Dich noch an uns erinnern....lang lang ist es ja her 
Würden uns freuen, mal wieder was von Dir zu hören 
Es grüßen das bayernmadl und der mondy
Lisa und Norbert
MWqnexYsIjXK:
on Transition forum if I end up a old man alone in the half flooded raeimns of Chantry with only stray cats and dogs for company, sat in semi darkness (due to conserving battery power) listening to war reports from the BBC Eastern Counties Emergency Broadcasting Services, I'm quite happy to do this. My grandparents generation in Malaya after all had to do the similar as well as deal with actual invasion of their homelands (though the weather was better).Unfortunately especially living currently without a car, IP4 and IP2 are further away than they seem there is currently no way I could sensibly give both my day job and the CSA the effort they deserve, and though I accept its not exactly right on , to me as an engineer it doesnt' seem that rational riding halfway across town to get food when there is a ASDA within walking distance.I don't like the place or its corporate ethos much myself but I do begrudingly admire the discreet but firm security culture Ipswich as a whole is way safer than London but you still do need to have your wits about you especially if running a business I did a bit of research about that area only to find the local shops folded due to being hit by both the residents of IP2 preferring to use Tescos as Copdock (despite this being the other end of the estate) and worse, targeting every shop in that precinct for shoplifting and even violent robbery, including the murder of the local pub landlady! Even then Asdas staff have on occasions had to deal with violence against them such as the scrote who tried to make off from a self service machine and roughed up a female shop assistant.That said, the area has been successfully cleaned up by both the coppers and whatever security Asda deploy to the point that all I saw today were two fat dogs being separated by security which were squaring up to each other but having considerable difficuty barking at each other without wheezing and panting, this made me laugh but I hope their vets put them both on a diet! (perhaps we should re-introduce dog carts?). Unfortunately it seems that some humans (like dogs!) may not cope so well at being free range and need a bit of firm but fair guidance, for instance seeing all the white and blue flashing LED strings down my sreet instinctively made me think back to 5 years ago and how the cops dealt with the murder of the 5 sex workers, quickly catching the offender *and* cleaning up the towns nightlife was again impressive to me and I don't always see eye to eye with the cops on certain matters!I don't fear the future (though its in fact harder to face up to than the relatively quick and clean exit we were faced with in the 80s when the Soviets and Yanks were dead set on blowing a good chunk of the world into radioactive dust) but don't see it as being anything *other* than hard work. I think I am still lucky as even in depressions there is always demand for folk who can keep the lights on and the phones working (Richard is in a similar position I wold expect) but am glad I am a bit older and can live with slightly less hedonism, it must be much harder for younger folk!Alex
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frwHUZnZGooznUaXkpl:
Hi Andy, I read your blog with interest as I Head up Corporate Policy on Sustainability for Asda. I would like to address your points and thank you for making the comments in the first place. Firstly it’s worth us remembering that packaging has a fundamental purpose. Not only does it protect products from being damaged but for food items it also helps to keep these fresh. Without packaging we would have food rotting in the fields or in supply networks, as can be seen every day in countries like India. We all know that decomposing food emits far more greenhouse gas than the production of packaging. So accepting that packaging is necessary in modern supply chains I also think it is fair to say that before 2006 we’d allowed our packing amount to grow. It had always remained within legal limits but there was also an opportunity to go after in terms of reduction. In fact as a low cost retailer every £1 spent on packaging should rightly have been spent making the product more affordable for our customers.In 2006 the Courtauld Commitment was extremely helpful in pulling industry together to look at the role of and the levels of packaging. While the rest of industry made a 10% reduction, we committed to reducing ours by a quarter. A reduction we achieved by the end of 2009 and in fact, now we’re at a 28% reduction. This is industry leading by a clear mile.We’ve also led industry through the development of our Packaging Scorecard which will be live in a trial phase next month. This Packaging Scorecard is intended as a tool to help evaluate the level and type of packaging around a product to make sensible decisions on how it can be optimised. We have also set ourselves the objective in this system of using carbon as a proxy for environment impact to get around the one dimensional approach that you get with pure weight reduction. This is industry leading also.Furthermore we were a founder member of the Packaging Recycling Action Group (PRAG), which I personally chaired for over a year. The PRAG is still in existence and is now chaired by INCPEN and members include major retailers, brands, councils, waste management companies, packaging industry and central and devolved governments, amongst others. It is the largest group ever to come together to look at packaging and how it can be optimised in its usage and be recycled / re-used more efficiently at end of life. The PRAG has acted as an advisor to government and undoubtedly has helped to move the debate forwards. The logo to which you refer was actually created by Asda and other retailers and in fact 95% of our packaging is technically recyclable. Whether one of our customers can actually recycle it with their local council depends on the collection arrangements in their local area but this doesn't stop it being a recyclable material. The PRAG again focussed on creating a discussion about how we can get standardisation of materials collected a kerb side for recycling.I hope that this further detail shows you that not only do we use less packaging than any other retailer but we have also helped to move the debate forwards and find solutions to packaging optimisation and recycling nationally, as well as being instrumental in creating the clearest logo yet to help packaging recycling. I would be very pleased to get any further comments you may have.
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mAntmdBKrbaCTrTV:
marks and spencer are much the same. Despite claims that they too are going to reduce their carbon footprint to zero, a lot of their packaging cannot be recycled, although a lot of it is excessive in the first place. Take men's white t shirts, the v neck variety is packaged by rolling it into a tube shape and holding it together with a cardboard sleeve. However the round neck is packaged with a huge cardboard back, on a plastic frame, with labels. There's just no need.
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Maybe it’s not so much that there’s no good music as that there is even more crap. Yes, crap’s always been more common, but now there’s even more of it. (I don’t have stats but just the fact that you can have like 12 different station formats, most of which have some new music on them every week, whereas when I was a kid there were far fewer). Even if it stays the same proportionally, it might hit some kind of critical mass where there is just too much crap. The thing that bugs me sometimes is that I’m pretty sure there is some music out there that I would really like and will probably never ever hear.(And I definitely have the ‘not as much time for music’ problem.)
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