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ESmorz
04-01-2009, 01:33 AM
Play April Fools Jokes?

Put the fear of gawd in the people?

HungryHank
04-01-2009, 01:33 AM
I doubt it, doctors are supposed to be professional regardless of the day.

lflkajfj12123
04-01-2009, 01:36 AM
colonoscopy anyone?

ESmorz
04-01-2009, 01:37 AM
What about Cops?

I'm going to need to give you a cavity search now. Pull the 'ol switcheroo and have a balloon in your hand.

"That's not mine officer!"

"I know, April Fools"

Matej
04-01-2009, 01:42 AM
5ldP1CjOskk

ESmorz
04-01-2009, 01:51 AM
I just went into the living room and my pug was on the table eating my teriyaki bowl. So I ate her instead.

April Fools.

My dog did just eat some of my bowl though. I microwaved it for 30 seconds just now.

Did that kill the dog germs?

s13silady
04-01-2009, 11:29 AM
I just went into the living room and my pug was on the table eating my teriyaki bowl. So I ate her instead.

April Fools.

My dog did just eat some of my bowl though. I microwaved it for 30 seconds just now.

Did that kill the dog germs?

arent dogs mouths cleaner than humans?

aziankingz
04-01-2009, 11:45 AM
arent dogs mouths cleaner than humans?

not unless humans eat their own shit..

ayuaddict
04-01-2009, 03:57 PM
i think everything is cleaner than humans.

ronmcdon
04-01-2009, 04:02 PM
arent dogs mouths cleaner than humans?

taken from some random site;

Oould you rather be bitten by a dog or by a human? Well, neither of course, but if you had to choose, which would it be? According to a widespread notion, a dog bite is the better choice since a canine mouth is cleaner than a human mouth.

Is this true? Well, yes and no. When we talk about the cleanliness of a mouth, we're really talking about the amount and type of bacteria it contains. The kind of bacteria found in a human mouth and a dog mouth depend on what's been there recently. Unlike dogs, humans typically do not eat raw meat, garbage, and small animals in various states of decay. Given a dog that just locked its jaws around a decomposing squirrel, we might say that the dog's mouth is, for the moment, less clean than a human mouth that has not recently housed a dead squirrel. And since the squirrel-eating dog may pick up disease-causing bacteria from the dead animal, a bite from that dog may pass on dangerous germs.

But insofar as a clean mouth means one that is less likely to cause disease, consider that germs tend to be species specific. Harmful dog germs are usually harmless for humans, unless we're talking about rabies, a disease that affects dogs and people in equally damaging ways. But generally, humans are immune to most dog germs. Likewise, human germs probably won't harm a dog. But human germs can harm humans, of course. So a bite from a human mouth full of harmful bacteria may very well be more damaging than a dog bite, even if the dog's mouth is full of harmful dog germs.

exitspeed
04-01-2009, 05:25 PM
One of my best friends is an MD. I'll ask him on Fri when he's over. I love asking him funny stuff. One night he told us the medical term for a yeast infection is Candida. Shit was real funny at the time, but it was evee funny when I ran into a lady named Candida Ortiz. lol.