Stamp of the Day

Topic: Contemporary Issues

Discussing the pandemic, 2020 politics, and other recent happenings

Stop me if you've heard this one before. Having lost a major election, a waning, lame-duck president and his congressional allies packs the courts with new appointees, including a Supreme Court judge who will vote on whether the effort is constitutional. This frightening scenario is both amazingly current and, as today's #stampoftheday illustrates, a piece …

As I write, the first presidential "debate" is underway and, while the bulk of the debate has, thanks to our president, degenerated into a juvenile schoolyard name-calling contest. Among the many things lost in the president's sadly infantile attacks is the fact that freedom is among the many things at stake in this consequential election. …

On a strange day when it's hard to know how to react to the news, it's heartening that the #stampoftheday project makes me pause and ponder Mahatma Gandhi, who was born on October 2, 1869 and who appeared on the 10th Champions of Liberty stamp, which was issued in January 1961. Gandhi, of course, employed nonviolent …

Edgar Allan Poe, author of "The Masque the Red Death", makes a bizarrely timely appearance as today's #stampoftheday. Poe, who is known today for his chilling tales of horror and haunting poems, was featured on a 3-cent stamp issued on October 7, 1949, which was the 100th anniversary of his death. This choice presents two immediately …

Although she died almost 60 years, Eleanor Roosevelt still offers important wisdom and guidance for those trying to address our current concerns. Roosevelt, who was born on October 11, 1884, was pictured on today's #stampoftheday, a 5-cent stamp issued in October 1963, about 11 months after she died. Roosevelt's story has been told by many people …

Like many of my generation, I learned that Robert E. Lee was special. Yes, we were taught that Lee fought for the Confederacy, which wanted to preserve slavery. But that uncomfortable fact was downplayed in favor of a narrative that instead highlighted both Lee's military prowess and his strength of character, particularly his efforts to …

When the young "future farmer" portrayed on today's #stampoftheday gazed over the bucolic farm and valley shown on the stamp do you think he was thinking that many decades later the owners of those fields would receive record amounts of politically motivated federal aid? That's the question that comes to mind when I examine today's #stampoftheday, …

I ended yesterday's #stampoftheday post by asking "What were they thinking?" when they issued a stamp celebrating the forced relocation of Native Americans. Today, however, it's clear "what they were thinking" when the Post Office issued three "National Defense" stamps on October 16, 1940 (which is why the stamps are today's #stampoftheday). "They" - particularly President Franklin …

It's hard to believe today, but once upon a time, the people running the U.S. Post Office invested in facilities that were supposed to speed up mail deliveries. Moreover, they celebrated those efforts, most notably in today's 4-cent #stampoftheday, which commemorated the opening of America's first automated post office in Providence, Rhode Island on October …