This is the exact wording leading up to the 17:00 minute mark:
“We need elections, they have to be free, and they have to be… nominated chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Charles Q. Brown, and his wife Serene...
Notes:
- The word “free” comes at the exact 17:00 mark
- Serene means: "unaffected by disturbance; calm or peaceful"
- Charlie Brown is the quintessential “keep trying” archetype
- there was no interruption between the words themselves, other than the change of voice. It flowed very well.
- “they have to be Free, and they have to be… Charlie Brown – Q”
Just some thoughts.
I suggest that nothing in this message was “a mistake,” and possibly nothing was extraneous, thus it behooves us to dig in.
Looking at the last bullet point, in 1972 there was an episode of Charlie Brown titled: You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown
Looking over the Plot section, there are some interesting parallels, though it doesn’t parallel exactly. It might be worth watching though, to get a better sense of things. One line of the explanation stood out to me however. It says:
Following his victory, Sally prods Linus to go to the principal and lay down the law, only to have the law laid down to him by the principal. After he sheepishly reveals this to Sally, she accuses Linus of selling out like all other politicians.
This clearly states that even though Linus was “President” after the election, he had no power at all in that position, rather, the Principal held all the power, and Linus was just a frontman, a stooge for the real PTB. Importantly, that was the intended lesson of the cartoon.
This is the exact wording leading up to the 17:00 minute mark:
“We need elections, they have to be free, and they have to be… nominated chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Charles Q. Brown, and his wife Serene...
Notes:
- The word “free” comes at the exact 17:00 mark
- Serene means: "unaffected by disturbance; calm or peaceful"
- Charlie Brown is the quintessential “keep trying” archetype
- there was no interruption between the words themselves, other than the change of voice. It flowed very well.
- “they have to be Free, and they have to be… Charlie Brown – Q”
Just some thoughts.
I suggest that nothing in this message was “a mistake,” and possibly nothing was extraneous, thus it behooves us to dig in.
Looking at the last bullet point, in 1972 there was an episode of Charlie Brown titled: You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown
Looking over the Plot section, there are some interesting parallels, though it doesn’t parallel exactly. It might be worth watching though, to get a better sense of things. One line of the explanation stood out to me however. It says:
Following his victory, Sally prods Linus to go to the principal and lay down the law, only to have the law laid down to him by the principal. After he sheepishly reveals this to Sally, she accuses Linus of selling out like all other politicians.
This clearly states that even though Linus was “President” after the election, he had no power at all in that position, rather, the Principal held all the power, and Linus was just a frontman, a stooge for the real PTB. Importantly, that was the lesson of the cartoon.
This is the exact wording leading up to the 17:00 minute mark:
“We need elections, they have to be free, and they have to be… nominated chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Charles Q. Brown, and his wife Serene...
Notes:
- The word “free” comes at the exact 17:00 mark
- Serene means: "unaffected by disturbance; calm or peaceful"
- Charlie Brown is the quintessential “keep trying” archetype
- there was no interruption between the words themselves, other than the change of voice. It flowed very well.
- “they have to be Free, and they have to be… Charlie Brown – Q”
Just some thoughts.
I suggest that nothing in this message was “a mistake,” and possibly nothing was extraneous, thus it behooves us to dig in.
Looking at the last bullet point, in 1972 there was an episode of Charlie Brown titled: You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown
Looking over the Plot section, there are some interesting parallels, though it doesn’t parallel exactly. It might be worth watching though, to get a better sense of things. One line of the explanation stood out to me however. It says:
Following his victory, Sally prods Linus to go to the principal and lay down the law, only to have the law laid down to him by the principal. After he sheepishly reveals this to Sally, she accuses Linus of selling out like all other politicians.
This clearly states that even though Linus was “President” after the election, he had no power at all in that position, rather, the Principal held all the power, and Linus was just a frontman, a stooge for the real PTB.
This is the exact wording leading up to the 17:00 minute mark:
“We need elections, they have to be free, and they have to be… nominated chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Charles Q. Brown, and his wife Serene...
Notes:
- The word “free” comes at the exact 17:00 mark
- Serene means: Unaffected by disturbance; calm or peaceful
- Charlie Brown is the quintessential “keep trying” archetype
- “they have to be Free, and they have to be… Charlie Brown – Q”
Just some thoughts.
I suggest that nothing in this message was “a mistake,” and possibly nothing was extraneous, thus it behooves us to dig in.
Looking at the last, in 1972 there was an episode of Charlie Brown titled: You're Not Elected, Charlie Brown
Looking over the Plot section, there are some interesting parallels, though it doesn’t parallel exactly. It might be worth watching though, to get a better sense of things. One line of the explanation stood out to me however. It says:
Following his victory, Sally prods Linus to go to the principal and lay down the law, only to have the law laid down to him by the principal. After he sheepishly reveals this to Sally, she accuses Linus of selling out like all other politicians.
This clearly states that even though Linus was “President” after the election, he had no power at all in that position, rather, the Principal held all the power, and Linus was just a frontman.