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Post by VirtualStranger on Aug 7, 2011 18:13:02 GMT -5
Where does the "bread goes in, toast comes out, you can't explain it" thing come from? www.youtube.com/watch?v=2BCipg71LbI&t=1m50sAlthough I do have to say that Dave Silverman handled that whole interview very poorly. Here's the correct response: Bill O'RLY: Tide goes in, tide goes out. You can't explain that. Me: Bill, A fucking 10-year-old could explain that.
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kzn02
Full Member
The Master of Tediousness
Posts: 140
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Post by kzn02 on Aug 7, 2011 18:29:01 GMT -5
That was the link. Fail on my coding.
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Post by shadoom2 on Aug 7, 2011 23:35:15 GMT -5
I'm fairly sure that Isis wasn't a virgin when Horus was born.
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Post by A Reasonable Rat on Aug 8, 2011 1:39:16 GMT -5
lolol tides. Also yay Bill Watterson
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Post by Jack Bauer on Aug 8, 2011 10:42:12 GMT -5
This wasn't AV1611VET, was it?
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Post by the sandman on Aug 8, 2011 11:15:49 GMT -5
Um....because it isn't "burning" in the sense that you are thinking of? "Nuclear fusion" and "combustion" are not the same processes. The former does not require oxygen, merely energy.
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kzn02
Full Member
The Master of Tediousness
Posts: 140
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Post by kzn02 on Aug 8, 2011 19:23:08 GMT -5
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Post by jackmann on Aug 8, 2011 20:03:36 GMT -5
The twelve disciples and Mary Magdalene.
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Post by szaleniec on Aug 10, 2011 9:42:55 GMT -5
Um....because it isn't "burning" in the sense that you are thinking of? "Nuclear fusion" and "combustion" are not the same processes. The former does not require oxygen, merely energy. It reminds me of the anti-Big Bang argument, "there would be no match to explode it".
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Post by discoberry on Aug 10, 2011 18:15:28 GMT -5
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Post by MaybeNever on Aug 10, 2011 23:40:38 GMT -5
Um....because it isn't "burning" in the sense that you are thinking of? "Nuclear fusion" and "combustion" are not the same processes. The former does not require oxygen, merely energy. It reminds me of the anti-Big Bang argument, "there would be no match to explode it". One of the arguments against the idea of an old Earth in the mid-nineteenth century was that the sun was logically at least as old as the planet, but even if it were made of pure coal - for what other source of power could there be? - it would've burned out in a few million years at the very most. Even when radioactivity suggested a new explanation for what was going on, the esteemed Lord Kelvin, who had consistently revised his estimated age the Earth down from millions to just a few tens of thousands of years, refused to accept the idea.
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kzn02
Full Member
The Master of Tediousness
Posts: 140
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Post by kzn02 on Aug 13, 2011 12:54:37 GMT -5
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kzn02
Full Member
The Master of Tediousness
Posts: 140
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Post by kzn02 on Aug 18, 2011 14:21:11 GMT -5
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