No, I don't mind, Jim. The postage stamp
is not such a big deal, and I realized that back in the 1980's, when Igor Stravinsky was given the "honor" of appearing on a two-cent stamp:
http://w3.rz-berlin.mpg.de/cmp/stravinsky.htmlI wish I'd kept a few of those stamps. If a true creative genius like Stravinsky is only worth
two cents to the Postal Service, this can't be much of an honor for anybody else! Even so, a Stooges stamp would be a fun thing and a lot of people would enjoy using it, so why not? The USPS might even sell more stamps, at a time when "snail mail" is going down the tubes and has been for years now, thanks to the Web. They just raised the price of stamps again, to 39 cents. They ought to just raise it to fifty cents, which should be good for about another decade without any more increases.
If I had to send all my correspondence by physical mail, I'd be using hundreds of dollars worth of postage a month, not to mention standing in line for hours at the Post Office— which in my case is only a block away, but it's still a major pain in the tuchis to go there when it's raining, or during the holidays when the line is clear out the door. No matter how busy it is, they never have enough clerks on duty, either. As of right now, I pay all but two of my monthly bills online, and automatically, which is about ten thousand percent better.
The fact is that the Postal Service nowadays exists mainly to deliver bills and junk mail, and that's all. I get so much unsolicited advertising crap in my mailbox, it's a wonder that there's a tree left standing anywhere between the Mexican and Canadian borders. Too bad I don't have a fireplace, I could heat myself all winter with all that paper to burn.
Technology has passed the USPS by, just like with the telephone companies. Pay phone service became so unprofitable due to e-mail and the cell phone that it's pretty much vanished by now, even in cities, except in railroad and subway stations and at airports and hotels.
Not to get into Economics 101 here, but the market economy
does happen to work that way.