Looking through some old books, I came across a book "Best of the Best American Humor."
It is an anthology of comics that have appeared in the comic newspaper Funny Times. It was printed in 2002, and had a collection of comic strips and articles dating back to 1985. The book was composed of two to three-page chapters, humorous articles by contributors that had run in the Funny Times. On these pages were also comic strip shorts that were approximately on topic with the chapter. One of its chapters was titled "My Life as a Man: Adventures in Testosterone" by Holly Nadler on page 119.
On this page, there was a single frame comic. A man, drawn to look boyish but with a man's face and buzz-cut, is holding a globe of the earth and making an angry face. He is facing three women, drawn to look girlish, innocent and bewildered. The caption read "I'm taking my ball and going home!"
I couldn't make out the artist signature in the corner, so I just called the contributing editor at Funny Times. They are very polite over there, and are working to find out which artist submitted the comic. Unfortunately, their records from those days were disposed of by their publisher, but the Contributing Editor may still be able to track it down. In any case, it's one of the names in the list of 126 contributors. I just don't know which yet. When I can get an attribution, I'll post it here and on other sites. All I know from the editor is that the comic was originally drawn between 1985 and 1995. It's a sort of Rosetta Stone for the notion that emerged that environmental problems are somehow solely men's fault. Unlike most such environmental political cartoons today, which can hide behind the excuse that the depicted man with the giant SUV or whatever is only a man because it is the default gender to be drawn, this cartoon shows a man in conflict with women. It explicitly casts the problem as a gender conflict, and grants a greater insight into the psychology of this issue than was perhaps intended.
I was surprised at how far we had gone politically into self-deprecating and even self-loathing humor in the 90s. I can vaguely remember seeing the comic the first time around and not being amused by it.