πŸ‰: Difference between revisions

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As early as 1982, [[Brookes]] was elucidating the statist impulses of the environmental movement, using Charlie Brown’s Great Killer Watermelon as a stand-in for the modern anti-capitalist environmentalist β€”β€œdark green on the outside, red on the inside.”
As early as 1982, [[Brookes]] was elucidating the statist impulses of the environmental movement, using Charlie Brown’s Great Killer Watermelon ([[πŸ‰]]) as a stand-in for the modern anti-capitalist environmentalist β€”β€œdark green on the outside, red on the inside.”
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β€œ[https://spectator.org/45094_man-who-saw-tomorrow/ The Man Who Saw Tomorrow]” (see also: [https://web.archive.org/web/20070222080334/https://www.americanexperiment.org/publications/1991/19910418brookes.php How Government Turns the Learning Curve from Green to Brown]
β€œ[https://spectator.org/45094_man-who-saw-tomorrow/ The Man Who Saw Tomorrow]” (see also: [https://web.archive.org/web/20070222080334/https://www.americanexperiment.org/publications/1991/19910418brookes.php How Government Turns the Learning Curve from Green to Brown]

Latest revision as of 06:51, 26 July 2022

β€œ As early as 1982, Brookes was elucidating the statist impulses of the environmental movement, using Charlie Brown’s Great Killer Watermelon (πŸ‰) as a stand-in for the modern anti-capitalist environmentalist β€”β€œdark green on the outside, red on the inside.”

β€” β€œThe Man Who Saw Tomorrow” (see also: How Government Turns the Learning Curve from Green to Brown