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Humour / Jokes / why did the chicken cross the road?
« on: September 18, 2007, 11:42:50 AM »
this is what some of the famous men had to say:

Plato:                For the greater good.

Karl Marx:            It was a historical inevitability.

Machiavelli:          So that its subjects will view it with admiration,

                     as a chicken which has the daring and courage to

                     boldly cross the road, but also with fear, for whom

                     among them has the strength to contend with such a

                     paragon of avian virtue?  In such a manner is the

                     princely chicken's dominion maintained.

Hippocrates:          Because of an excess of light pink gooey stuff in its

                     pancreas.

Jacques Derrida:      Any number of contending discourses may be discovered

                     within the act of the chicken crossing the road, and

                     each interpretation is equally valid as the authorial

                     intent can never be discerned, because structuralism

                     is DEAD, DAMMIT, DEAD!

Thomas de Torquemada: Give me ten minutes with the chicken and I'll find out.

Timothy Leary:        Because that's the only kind of trip the Establishment

                     would let it take.

Douglas Adams:        Forty-two.

Nietzsche:            Because if you gaze too long across the Road, the Road

                     gazes also across you.

Oliver North:         National Security was at stake.

B.F. Skinner:         Because the external influences which had pervaded its

                     sensorium from birth had caused it to develop in such a

                     fashion that it would tend to cross roads, even while

                     believing these actions to be of its own free will.

Carl Jung:            The confluence of events in the cultural gestalt

                     necessitated that individual chickens cross roads at

                     this historical juncture, and therefore

                     synchronicitously brought such occurrences into being.

Jean-Paul Sartre:     In order to act in good faith and be true to itself,

                     the chicken found it necessary to cross the road.

Ludwig Wittgenstein:  The possibility of "crossing" was encoded into the

                     objects "chicken" and "road", and circumstances came

                     into being which caused the actualization of this

                     potential occurrence.

Albert Einstein:      Whether the chicken crossed the road or the road crossed

                     the chicken depends upon your frame of reference.

Aristotle:            To actualize its potential.

Buddha:               If you ask this question, you deny your own chicken-

                     nature.

Howard Cosell:        It may very well have been one of the most astonishing

                     events to grace the annals of history.  An historic,

                     unprecedented avian biped with the temerity to attempt

                     such an herculean achievement formerly relegated to

                     homo sapien pedestrians is truly a remarkable occurence.

Salvador Dali:        The Fish.

Darwin:               It was the logical next step after coming down from

                     the trees.

Emily Dickinson:      Because it could not stop for death.

Epicurus:             For fun.

Ralph Waldo Emerson:  It didn't cross the road; it transcended it.

Johann von Goethe:    The eternal hen-principle made it do it.

Ernest Hemingway:     To die. In the rain.

Werner Heisenberg:    We are not sure which side of the road the chicken

                     was on, but it was moving very fast.

David Hume:           Out of custom and habit.

Jack Nicholson:      'Cause it (censored) wanted to. That's the (censored)

                     reason.

Pyrrho the Skeptic:   What road?

Ronald Reagan:        I forget.

John Sununu:          The Air Force was only too happy to provide the

                     transportation, so quite understandably the chicken

                     availed himself of the opportunity.

The Sphinx:           You tell me.

Mr. T:                If you saw me coming you'd cross the road too

Henry David Thoreau:  To live deliberately ... and suck all the marrow

                     out of life.

Mark Twain:           The news of its crossing has been greatly  exaggerated.

Molly Yard:           It was a hen!

Zeno of Elea:         To prove it could never reach the other side.

Chaucer:              So priketh hem nature in hir corages.

Wordsworth:           To wander lonely as a cloud.

The Godfather:        I didn't want its mother to see it like that.

Keats:                Philosophy will clip a chicken's wings.

Blake:                To see heaven in a wild fowl.

Othello:              Jealousy.

Dr Johnson:           Sir, had you known the Chicken for as long as I have,

                     you would not so readily enquire, but feel rather the

                     Need to resist such a public Display of your own

                     lamentable and incorrigible Ignorance.

Mrs Thatcher:         This chicken's not for turning.

Supreme Soviet:       There has never been a chicken in this photograph.

Oscar Wilde:          Why, indeed? One's social engagements whilst in

                     town ought never expose one to such barbarous

                     inconvenience - although, perhaps, if one must cross a

                     road, one may do far worse than to cross it as the

                     chicken in question.

Kafka:                Hardly the most urgent enquiry to make of a low-grade

                     insurance clerk who woke up that morning as a hen.

Swift:                It is, of course, inevitable that such a loathsome,

                     filth-ridden and degraded creature as Man should a**ume

                     to question the actions of one in all respects his

                     superior.

Macbeth:              To have turned back were as tedious as to go o'er.

Whitehead:            Clearly, having fallen victim to the fallacy of

                     misplaced concreteness.

Freud:                An die andere Seite zu kommen. (Much laughter)

Hamlet:               That is not the question.

Donne:                It crosseth for thee.

Pope:                 It was mimicking my Lord Hervey.

Constable:            To get a better view.

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