For broadcast on CBS Radio Network stations
April 17-18, 1999:
Propaganda or profiteering?
The Stamp Collecting Report, I'm Lloyd de Vries
Yugoslavia last week issued a set of postage stamps
commemorating Serb resistance to the NATO airstrikes. The
stamp designs feature the "target badges" -- black and
white concentric circles -- worn by anti-NATO protesters
in Belgrade. Serbian state television says two additional
series of stamps are being prepared.
At first, you may be outraged that Yugoslavia would have
the nerve to put such propaganda on stamps.
That was the reaction to Iraq's anti-US stamps several
years ago, and, twenty-five years ago, North Vietnam's war
protest stamps.
On the other hand, isn't that part of what stamps are for?
To promote causes and subjects near and dear to the hearts
of the people of the issuing countries?
During World War Two, the U-S issued a number of propaganda
stamps, one simply declaring "Win the War."
Is a country issuing stamps for its own causes -- whether
you like them or not -- worse than one honoring a pop
celebrity who's never heard of that country?
And that's stamp collecting this week.
I'm Lloyd de Vries, CBS News.
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