Yellow ribbons dwindle with war support
Financial Times
By Andrew Ward in Atlanta

Published: March 2 2007 22:18 | Last updated: March 2 2007 23:02

For three years after the invasion of Iraq, it was difficult to drive
more than a few miles through middle America

without seeing a car displaying a magnetic yellow ribbon.

The magnets, bearing the slogan "Support Our Troops", became a symbol of
patriotism for millions of US motorists.

But as support for the war fades, demand for yellow ribbons has collapsed.

Magnet America, the largest manufacturer of the product, has seen sales
fall from a peak of 1.2m in August 2004 to

about 4,000 a month and now has an unsold stockpile of about 1m magnets.

"We have enough supplies to meet demand for years to come," said Micah
Pattisall, director of operations. "Every

product has a lifespan and this one has run its course."

At its peak, the North Carolina-based company employed 180 people to
handle sales, marketing and distribution.

Today, it employs 11 people.

Mr Pattisall said declining support for the war was not the only reason
for the slump.

A flood of cheap imports from China also hurt the company, which has
refused to shift production overseas even

though it costs three times as much to manufacture in the US.

Only about half a dozen companies are still supplying the magnets
compared with up to 200 at the height of the fad,

according to Mr Pattisall.

When the company was founded in April 2003, during the initial invasion
of Iraq, nearly all its revenues came from

yellow ribbons. Today, patriotic products account for only 6 per cent of
sales.

The yellow ribbon has been overtaken as the company's best-selling
product by a wristband promoting chastity before

marriage with the slogan "True Love Waits".

"We are growing again and looking to hire additional staff," Mr
Pattisall said.

Yellow ribbons were first displayed widely in support of kidnapped US
diplomats during the Iranian hostage crisis in

1979.

Some critics have condemned the magnets as a cheap and superficial way
to honour the armed forces and highlighted

the irony of placing them on gas-guzzling vehicles that deepen the US's
dependence on Middle Eastern oil.

Resentful that the yellow ribbon has become associated with support for
the president, George W. Bush, opponents of

the war have introduced their own car magnets emblazoned with anti-war
statements.

On Ebay, the internet auction site, on Thursday, a black and white
ribbon bearing the slogan "Out of Iraq, Bring 'Em

Back" was priced at $5.

Traditional yellow ribbon magnets, in contrast, could be bought for one
cent.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2007
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