I think it's very charitable that they supply me with free kitchen swing-bin liners. ;-)
I've always been a bit dubious about the number of this kind of spam mail I get so I did some digging...
....and yes. It's a limited company, with a paid up capital of £500k. Presumably they're also drawing decent salaries and the cynic in me might also suspect that some of the employees are family too.
Their only "charitable" commitment is giving £50k a year to the named charity.
There are genuine charities doing this though - just keep an eye out if you recycle your clothes this way and use a proper charity.
I think it's very charitable that they supply me with free kitchen swing-bin liners. ;-)
F.T.F.A.
All of this type of thing go straight from the letterbox to the bin. I take a great deal of stuff to charity shops, especially when moving house as I'm about to do, and will continue to do so. I'll take them to those charity shops of my choosing that are legitimate.
I never throw any clothes out, they get worn to destruction or given to homeless on the street. Most of the stuff sent to charity or recycling end up in big bales n some port in Africa or the 3rd world and pile up unrecycled.
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tbh most people i know ~(inc myself) just use these as a way to dispose of old clothes and footwear that is past the stage that a tramp would refuse them.
I checked a couple that had come through my door on the Gov Companies registration and both recent startups with eastern european names. I wondered how to check just how much of the "charity" gets to the charity. There is a local place that buys old clothes, often frequented by folks in "nameless" white vans, taking full loads! (Easily seen from the supermarket car park!)
We always get these but I never realised it was a scam. I just saw the charities logo and assumed it was from them directly. Charity fund raising in general has really got a bit grubby.
Most of the stuff donated ends up in Eastern Europe thrift stores. A lot of people fall for it.
Don't just do something, sit there. - TNH
We get one of these bags through the door every week - how much stuff do they think we've got to get rid?
I wonder if there are any real tramps left. All the "homeless" people in my area seem to have just made a home for themselves and settled in disused doorways.
I do remember than most towns had the odd one traveling thru. And as society has grown wealthier there are more and more
Last edited by redmonaco; 27th April 2023 at 11:08.
Around 30 years ago, a slightly dodgy friend of mine had an arrangement with a charity ("The Lourdes Society for Invalid Children", if I remember correctly), whereby he paid them a set amount of money per year and he could keep the proceeds of any fundraising that he did in their name.
The advantage for the charity was that they received a known amount of money every year, without having to expend any effort or resources in fundraising. I imagine that this sort of arrangement is more common than most of us realise.
I suppose in a just society charity wouldn't (shouldn't?) be necessary...
The UK regulator has in my view lost control of the charity sector. Far too many seem to be either political fronts or simply a method by which people can pay themselves a decent salary. Even well known charities can be dubious in how much they spend on administration compared to a well run one.
Don't just do something, sit there. - TNH
Eton College is a charity - just saying.
For me the word "charity" is nowadays a prompt for due diligence, as Scepticalist and others have done. The sector has some great exponents but also a lot of dodgy behaviour; Oxfam, Save the Children and Kids Company for example. There are many others which have high administrative charges, low donation percentages and CEOs on very healthy salaries.
I'm the same, and with free newspapers.
I trained my son at a young age to put all newspapers in the recycling bin. Being an eager little boy, he grabbed a paper that had just fallen through the letterbox, and ran to the recycling bin to dispose of it.
The chap who delivered it was still on the driveway!
Just had one this morning, supporting the homeless in Norwich?????? From t'internet:-
"MTD CLOTHING LTD
Company number 14011566
Follow this company File for this company
Company Overview for MTD CLOTHING LTD (14011566)
Filing history for MTD CLOTHING LTD (14011566)
People for MTD CLOTHING LTD (14011566)
More for MTD CLOTHING LTD (14011566)
Officers
Persons with significant control
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Current officers
Officers: 1 officer / 0 resignations
POLUBINSKAJA, Natalija
Correspondence address
29 Macdonald Road, Cromer, England, NR27 9AP
Role Active
Director
Date of birth
February 1987
Appointed on
30 March 2022
Nationality
Lithuanian
Country of residence
England
Occupation
Director"
Address appears to be a B&B in Cromer!
Last edited by tixntox; 28th April 2023 at 11:38.