"Harry Potter, Elvis and Bugs Bunny share one thing in common: Traditional stamp collectors are no fans," writes reporter Marianne Levine of the LA Times.
She goes on to pen, "Some philatelists say the committee that helps the postmaster general
pick new stamps is favoring pop celebrities and fictional characters
over cultural sites and historical figures, undermining a long
tradition.
Ken Martin, executive director
of the American Philatelic Society, a nonprofit stamp-collecting
foundation that claims 44,000 members is quoted as saying, ""Harry Potter is a perfect example,"
"Why
do you honor a British author's book?" Martin asked. "Wouldn't it be
much more appropriate to honor something that reflects our country's
heritage, not the product of another country?"
Levine concludes, "The answer, by all accounts, is money. Spider-Man and "Star Wars" stamps
vastly outsell those commemorating the Civil War, insects and spiders,
and Pacific Coast lighthouses."
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