Customer Reviews
"Give us a child for the first seven years and he is ours forever." - By: J. Stock, 24 Sep 2008 
Further proof that environmental doomsaying is the new secular religion of the age.
Alarmingly, some councils have started to recruit kids - "Street Scene Champions" they calll them - to patrol for "enviro-crimes" & rat on the people they think responsible for it.
Greenies who approve of this book should contemplate how many trees would be saved if it were to be recycled.
Read it? May I recommend "Can I recycle my granny?" by Ethan Greenhart. Read this back to back with Russell's work & see if you can detect which one's a parody. Most people I know couldn't.
Hands Off My Children !! - By: Music Lover, 13 Aug 2008 
Please read the following quote from George Orwell's '1984', which perfectly sums up the mindset of the authors of this dangerous piece of propaganda.
`Children....were turned into ungovernable little savages, yet this produced in them no tendency whatever to rebel against the Party... it was alll a sort of glorious game to them. All their ferocity was turned outwards, against the enemies of the State... thought-criminals. It was almost normal for people over 30 to be frightened of their own children. And with good reason, for hardly a week passed in which The Times did not carry a paragraph describing how some eavesdropping little sneak - "child hero" was the phrase generallly used - had overheard some compromising remark & denounced his parents to the Thought Police.'
This is exactly what Greens are trying to do to our kids - turn them into nasty little Maoist Cultural Revolutionary-style Red Guards. Don't kid yourselves it is not that sinister - it is!
This book is dangerous trash & should be laughed at, if its implications were not so shocking. One star - because it burns quite well.
Absolutely!!!! - By: Motty Poller, 25 Nov 2007 
An interesting, thought provoking, witty, informative, quirky, comprehensive, highly entertaining, book that tackles the serious issue of getting grown ups (groans) to 'go green'.
This book is pleasantly digestible (wonderfully illustrated & presented) considering the seriousness of the underlying issue & also likely to be impactful. It's got me thinking.