<p>“Why would a woodchuck chuck wood if a woodchuck could chuck wood?”</p>
<p>You’ve clearly never chucked wood. Its one of life’s great joys.</p>
<p>“Why would a woodchuck chuck wood if a woodchuck could chuck wood?”</p>
<p>You’ve clearly never chucked wood. Its one of life’s great joys.</p>
<p>Why not?</p>
<p>On a serious note - Why do the majority of black people decide to act stereotypically? </p>
<p>On a sillier note - Why are their so many drug headlines in Spain? (I do a monthly report on it for Spanish II)</p>
<p>I saw this in a Sarah Silverman episode and thought it was pretty interesting:</p>
<p>If you were driving along a road and saw Osama Bin Laden crossing the street (assuming he’s still alive), would you run him over? </p>
<p>Sarah did; however, the man was just a Bin Laden look-alike. Whoops.</p>
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This is true. I bowl wood with my arm straightening <15°, thank you very much.</p>
<p>What did the world smell like thousands of years ago before humans polluted the air?</p>
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Nope. I would much rather him have to live out the rest of his days in prison. Hopefully a modern American prison. Not that he would have many days… Maybe the rest of his day.</p>
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What part of the world and how many thousands?</p>
<p>^^Probably like roses or trees or animal feces. Essentially, something very natural.</p>
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<p>hahaha it took me a few moments to understand this :p</p>
<p>Is it appropriate to sacrifice the lives of many for the lives of the few?</p>
<p>What does the air smell like now? Does air even have a scent? </p>
<p>If the “air” smelled like roses or trees or animal feces, you’d actually be smelling roses or trees or animal feces, not the air itself.</p>
<p>^^ No. Not by any metric but the relationship of the few to the individual deciding.</p>
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<p>The area that would become Southern California and lets say… five thousand.</p>
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<p>The air is a mix of things, isn’t it? My point was… I wonder what the world smelt like before all this pollution.</p>
<p>^ Interesting question. Invent a time machine and go back to that time period? Just make sure to not step on any butterflies…</p>
<p>By the way we all see the same colors. The way things get color is they have photons that only emit a particular shade when light reflects off of it. It would be impossible for everyone to see all different colors because we simply take in, through our pupils, light that is reflected off objects with particular photon shades. Your brain doesn’t actually interpret the colors, it just flips the whole image around so it’s upright. Everyone sees the same objects with the same photons so everyone sees the same colors. The only thing that can change the colors you see is eye troubles.</p>
<p>^How do optical illusions fool the eye then? Its the brain that interprets images, not the actual eye… That’s why you can hallucinate things that aren’t actually in front of you, isn’t it?</p>
<p>Why do we have time zones? Why can’t we all just be on universal time? You know how December in the Northern Hemisphere would be winter, and summer in the southern? Why can’t it be like the 8th hour of the day is sun out for this part of the world but it’s sun down for this other part. Would it be too much to suddenly change the system?</p>
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Untrue. The brain interprets the waves of photons into visible light. After brain injuries, some patients report complete rearrangement of colors.</p>
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Annoying/hard to adjust while traveling/moving?</p>
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Pretty much.</p>
<p>Is it possible to travel faster than the speed of light?</p>
<p>^ No</p>
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<p>That’s friggin awesome. If that were to happen to me, I wonder if it would affect my synesthesia.</p>