Stamp of the Day

November 2020

Donald Trump Takes His Cue from Rutherford B. Hayes

Here’s an implausible and oddly timely pitch for a Netflix mini-series. A Republican presidential candidate clearly loses he popular vote and appears to be on track to lose the electoral college. But his backers argue that the popular vote count in several key states nominally won by Democrats was badly flawed. They get their allies […]

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Clotheslines and Republican Efforts to Stay in Power

An all-but-forgotten hardball political maneuver designed to keep Republicans in power in Washington is behind-the-image story of today’s #stampoftheday. Although these actions are quite salient today, they aren’t recent. Rather, they date back to the late 1800s, when five of what are now the nation’s least populated states were admitted to the union. That decision,

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Basketball Reminds Us: Don’t Be a Jerk

In my 50s, I started playing goalie in the wonderfully named “Over-the-Hill Soccer League,” Over the years, I relearned some important lessons not only about sports but also about life. Those timely lessons are underscored by today’s #stampoftheday, a 4-cent stamp, issued on November 6, 1961, the 100th birthday of James Naismith, who invented the

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The Iconography of Giuseppe Garibaldi

As Election Day approaches, it is increasingly hard think or write about stamps that don’t somehow connect with tomorrow’s watershed vote. Consequently, I’ve been on the lookout for stamps that, in some way, connect with my current emotional mix of anxiety, excitement, bewilderment, resoluteness, and many other things. Today, that process brings me to 4-

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