Originally posted by 90th Light
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Put yourself in their shoes for just a minute. The war is over and there is no big nazi government to sell all your badges to like you have done so lucratively for the past 10 years. How will you survive? Will you close up shop and try to start something new? How will you survive in the meantime?
For companies like S&L, the easiest and quickest thing to do would be to put together souvenier boards for the occupation forces. This is possibly the only revenue stream a manufacturer that specializes in awards could count on. So, when these leftover stocks ran out, do you really think they would just throw up their hands and be done with it just because it was "technically" illegal to sell them? We are not talking about just a big money making, greedy practive. We are talking about survival of workers and families!
I am fully aware of your point that it was illegal, but there are lots of things that are illegal and people still do it. Again, we are talking about survival and people in horrible situations in war (and after) will do ANYTHING they can to survive. There are countless stories of German's selling just plain silverware to GIs and telling them that they were "Hitler's personal silverware".
As the years passed and leftover badge supplies were extinquished, a greater demand for these souveniers would naturally emerge. Especially given the fact of new occupation forces, who came in near the end or right after the war and still wanted to bring something home to support their "war stories". It is human nature to want to do this, and would only add to the demand for souveniers. That demand continues to this day!!!! I also venture to say that the atmosphere in germany today regarding the swastika was just as bad as it was in the 40s and 50s and maybe even more so today. It is still illegal to produce anything with a swastika in Germany, yet Carsten Staegemeir and other German fakers are doing it right now as we speak! He is just greedy, and has no added incentive of "mere survival" as companies like S&L and Deumer had in the decade after the war. Yet he is perfectly fine with accepting the risk of being put in jail for producing his wares with a swastika.
It was still illegal for S&L to produce badges with the swastika in 1956 as opposed to 1946. I think we can all agree that S&L definately produced reproductions with the swastika in 1956, so why were they willing to break the law in 1956 and not in 1946??
Tom
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