
WHY DID THE CHICKEN CROSEE THE ROAD?
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George Bush's Answer: We don't really
care why the chicken crossed the road. We just want to know if
the chicken is on our side of the road or not. The chicken is
either with us or it is against us. There is no middle ground
here. | |
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Al Gore's Answer: I invented the
chicken. I invented the road. Therefore, the chicken crossing
the road represented the application of these two different
functions of government in a new, reinvented way designed to
bring greater services to the American
people. | |
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Bill Gates' Answer: I have just
released eChicken 2003, which will not only cross roads, but
will lay eggs, file your important documents, and balance your
checkbook - and Internet Explorer is an inextricable part of
eChicken. | |
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Martha Stewart's Answer: No one called
to warn me which way that chicken was going. I had
a standing order at the farmer's market to sell my eggs
when the price dropped to a certain level. No little bird gave
me any insider
information. | |
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Dr. Seuss' Answer: Did the chicken
cross the road? Did he cross it with a toad? Yes, the
chicken crossed the road, But why it crossed, I've not been
told! | |
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Ernest Hemingway's Answer: To die. In
the rain.
Alone. | |
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Martin Luther King Jr's Answer: I
envision a world where all chickens will be free to cross
roads without having their motives called into
question. | |
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Grandpa's Answer: In my day, we didn't
ask why the chicken crossed the road. Someone told us that the
chicken crossed the road, and that was good enough for
us. | |
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Barbara Walters' Answer: Isn't that
interesting? In a few moments we will be listening to
the chicken tell, for the first time, the heart-warming
story of how it experienced a serious case of molting and
went on to accomplish its life-long dream of crossing the
road. | |
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Ralph Nader's Answer: The chicken's
habitat on the original side of the road had been pollutedby
unchecked industrialist greed. The chicken did not reach the
unspoiled habitat on other side of the road because it was
crushed by the wheels of a gas-guzzling
SUV. | |
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Jerry Seinfield's Answer: Why does
anyone cross a road? I mean, why doesn't anyone ever think to
ask, "What the heck was this chicken doing walking around all
over the place
anyway?" | |
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Pat Buchanan's Answer: To steal a job
from a decent, hard-working
American. | |
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Rush Limbaugh's Answer: I don't know
why the chicken crossed the road, but I'll bet it was getting
a government grant to cross the road, and I'll bet someone out
there is already forming a support group to help chickens with
crossing-the-road syndrome. Can you believe this? How much
more of this can real Americans take? Chickens crossing the
road paid for by their tax dollars, and when I say tax
dollars, I'm talking about your money, money the government
took from you to build roads for chickens to
cross. | |
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Jerry Falwell's Answer: Because the
chicken was gay! Isn't it obvious? Can't you people see the
plain truth in front of your face? The chicken was going to
the "other side." That's what they call it -- the other side.
Yes, my friends, that chicken is gay. And, if you eat that
hicken, you will become gay too. I say we boycott all chickens
until we sort out this abomination that the liberal media
whitewashes with seemingly harmless phrases like "the other
side.". | |
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John Lennon's Answer: Imagine all the
chickens crossing roads in
peace. | |
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Aristotle's Answer: It is the nature
of chickens to cross the
road. | |
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Karl Marx's Answer: It was a
historical
inevitability. | |
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Saddam Hussein's Answer: This was an
unprovoked act of rebellion and we were quite justified
in dropping 50 tons of nerve gas on
it. | |
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Voltaire's Answer: I may not agree
with what the chicken did, but I will defend to the death its
right to do
it. | |
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Captain Kirk's Answer: To boldly go
where no chicken has gone
before. | |
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Fox Mulder's Answer: You saw it cross
the road with your own eyes! How many more chickens have to
cross before you believe
it? | |
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Scully's Answer: It was a simple
bio-mechanical reflex that is commonly found in
chickens. | |
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Bill Clinton's Answer:
I did not cross
the road with THAT chicken. What do you mean by chicken? Could
you define chicken,
please? | |
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The Bible's Answer: And God came down
from the heavens, and He said unto the chicken, "Thou shalt
cross the road." And the chicken crossed the road, and there
was much
rejoicing. | |
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Albert Einstein's Answer: Did the
chicken really cross the road or did the road move beneath
the chicken? | |
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Sigmund Freud's Answer: The fact that
you are at all concerned that the chicken crossed the road
reveals your underlying sexual
insecurity. | |
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L.A.P.D.'s Answer: Give me ten minutes
with the chicken and I'll find
out. | |
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Richard Nixon's Answer: The chicken
did not cross the road. I repeat, the chicken did not cross
the
road. | |
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Buddha's Answer: If you ask this
question, you deny your own chicken
nature. | |
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Joseph Stalin's Answer: I don't care.
Catch it. I need its eggs to make my
omelette. | |
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Carl Jung's Answer: 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. | |
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Louis Farrakhan's Answer: The road,
you will see, represents the black man. The chicken crossed
the "black man" in order to trample him and keep him
down. | |
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John Locke's Answer: Because he was
exercising his natural right to
liberty. | |
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Albert Camus' Answer: It doesn't
matter; the chicken's actions have no meaning except to
him. | |
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Oliver Stone's Answer: The question is
not "Why did the chicken cross the road?" but is rather "Who
was crossing the road at the same time whom we overlooked in
our haste to observe the chicken
crossing?" | |
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The Pope's Answer: That is only for
God to
know. | |
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Immanuel Kant's Answer: chicken, being
an autonomous being, chose to cross the road of his own free
will. | |
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MC. Escher's Answer: That depends on
which plane of reality the chicken was on at the
time. | |
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George Orwell's Answer: Because the
government had fooled him into thinking that he was crossing
the road of his own free will, when he was really only serving
their
interests. | |
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Plato's Answer: For the greater
good. | |
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Nietzsche's Answer:
Because if you
gaze too long across the Road, the Road gazes also across
you. | |
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B.F. Skinner's Answer: 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
freewill. | |
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Jean-Paul Sartre's Answer: In order to
act in good faith and be true to itself, the chicken found it
necessary to cross the
road. | |
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Emily Dickenson's Answer: Because it
could not stop for
death. | |
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O.J. Simpson's Answer: It didn't. I
was playing golf with it at the
time. | |
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Ken Starr's Answer: I intend to prove
that the chicken crossed the road at the behest of the
president of the United States of America, in an effort to
distract law enforcement officials and the American public
from the criminal wrongdoing our highest elected official has
been trying to cover up. As a result, the chicken is just
another pawn in the president's ongoing and elaborate scheme
to obstruct justice and undermine the rule of law. For that
reason, my staff intends to offer the chicken unconditional
immunity provided he cooperates fully with our investigation.
Furthermore, the chicken will not be permitted to reach the
other side of the road, until our investigation and any
Congressional follow-up investigations, have been completed.
(We also are investigating whether Sid Blumenthal has leaked
information to the Rev. Jerry Falwell, alleging the chicken to
be homosexual in an effort to discredit any useful testimony
the bird may have to offer, or at least to ruffle his
feathers.). | |
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Colonel Sanders' Answer: I missed
one? | |
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