In addition to littering Twitter with Obamacare love letters, the AARP has a thing for sending out floods of junk mail to the under-50 crowd.
https://twitter.com/munilass/status/407204509073424385
https://twitter.com/DevinRuic/status/372519958762516480
I got this in the mail today. Apparently 30 is now an AARP eligible age: pic.twitter.com/NQhiElAs9b
— Queen of England (@QueenLizzyII) December 4, 2013
https://twitter.com/srandy24/status/405490050776829952
Hmm. But how to respond? The Twitterverse has a few suggestions. (Not that we would ever condone these ideas, of course. Standard disclaimers apply.)
So this is what I sent back to AARP in their postage paid envelope pic.twitter.com/HI7o9iu1ZF
— John Shega (@johnshega) December 1, 2013
When you get your AARP card @AARP pic.twitter.com/zwPJfrrLHS
— Take No More (@TakeNoMoore) October 8, 2013
I'm mailing this back in the postage paid envelope. Take that AARP. pic.twitter.com/T9r9DHpaD3
— ???MAMADOXIE??? (@Mamadoxie) October 28, 2013
.@AARP sends me these sign-up forms w/membership card. I fill it out this way and send it all back. 🙂 #TGDN pic.twitter.com/iUWId1UwSC
— Vic (@bottomgun1) April 7, 2013
Recommended
https://twitter.com/dougsheets/status/173620050845106176
Sending my message to AARP in their prepaid envelope! pic.twitter.com/RSQ4ZqhzHQ
— Cal Artist (@ArtistCal) September 16, 2013
Ok, AARP isn't taking the hint gonna attach this postage paid envelope to something really heavy and send it back pic.twitter.com/3ERVTZm3
— Just Me (@ocdred) October 11, 2012
@ConsrvativeDiva @MeganSmiles I send all my @AARP mailers back with a Oh, HELL NO, Not when U support liberal causes written on it.
— Heidi (@reshas) November 5, 2013
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