I made a daisy chain of rubber bands that - when stetched, was about 400meters long (to the end of our street). When i let it go, I thought something crazy would happen (i was about 6-7)but in reality nothing really happened it just shrank fast
I was extremely disapointed, it look many days to do this, I learnt at an early age about imagination vs reality
in USSR pretty much everything was in shortage, including rubber bands, and when you got your hands on it, you'd do something like "rubber band motor" plane or boat like this:
Now, back to watching England getting slaughtered by Italy... oh, wait!
What service are you referring to?
The Royal Mail also encouraged bulk mail during that time doing final mile for companies that were competition and specialising in junk mail.
Luckily those days are over and most non elderly people in the UK can expect zero letters on most days.
Doesn't this mean less reusable?
I have plastic compost bags which stay intact for months in the cupboard but fall apart in 2 days when filled with wet food waste.
They bloody well do still use them; I find them on my doorstep regularly!
I've got on hanging around the fire smash glass activation thingie outside my door, and another around a handle on my chest of drawers (can't remember why!).
A bit of Googling shows it came from the murder of Leanne Tiernan. http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/england/2116617.stm
The ubiquitous leftover rubber band hereabouts comes from bundles of broccoli but that's a less convenient form factor.
All that paper, fuel and wasted human effort to make sure I get something I throw away in the recycle bin immediately after I get it. It should honestly be a crime and I don’t know how it isn’t.
In 2005 the Royal Mail was fully privatised. Since then I personally feel the amount of unaddressed mail has increased. But that might be in my head