thanks and again
To: stainlessbanner; TheBigB; martin_fierro
2 posted on
08/26/2004 11:33:43 AM PDT by
Constitution Day
(...Reporting live from the Holy Barbecue City of Wilson, NC...)
To: InvisibleChurch
3 posted on
08/26/2004 11:35:01 AM PDT by
headsonpikes
(Spirit of '76 bttt!)
To: Petronski; dead
5 posted on
08/26/2004 11:36:31 AM PDT by
martin_fierro
(_____oooo_( ° ¿ ° )_oooo_____)
To: InvisibleChurch
Don't know about snakes having legs, but SBVT story sure does.
To: InvisibleChurch
I saw a picture of one recently snowboarding in Montana with a daisy pull on his zipper.
7 posted on
08/26/2004 11:36:54 AM PDT by
N. Theknow
(Democrat - It's in the dictionary - It's between "delusional" and "dimwit.")
To: InvisibleChurch
10 posted on
08/26/2004 11:44:23 AM PDT by
Corin Stormhands
(John Kerry LIED and good men DIED for your right to vote against him.)
To: InvisibleChurch; Constitution Day; martin_fierro
Some snakes, like boas and pythons, do indeed have vestigial hind legs. The most common explanation is that they are used as claspers during copulation.
You thought I was gonna be all smartassy, didn'tcha? ;)
11 posted on
08/26/2004 11:45:45 AM PDT by
TheBigB
(Sure wish -I- had one'a them anti-shrew barrels...)
To: InvisibleChurch
No..but some species have vestigal legs..small bone remnants ( inside the body)of what used to be their legs back when they were amphibians or whatever..
13 posted on
08/26/2004 11:47:13 AM PDT by
ken5050
(Bill Clinton has just signed to be the national spokesman for Hummer..)
To: InvisibleChurch
Sure! I've seen Hillary walk several times.
16 posted on
08/26/2004 11:50:10 AM PDT by
rintense
(Results matter.)
To: InvisibleChurch
does snakes have legs?The one's that pick up live hand grenades don't.
22 posted on
08/26/2004 1:00:58 PM PDT by
dinasour
To: InvisibleChurch
I seem to recall birds (very very rarely) grow teeth; there's a genetic program in there for teeth that is normally switched off in birds. Archeopteryx had teeth.
Whales still have arms, hands, legs and feet, with the exact same complement of bones in the same configuration as most other mammals, but modified to form flippers or simply vanished from view, inside their bodies and completely vestigial.
Human feet reflect their origin in arboreal ape feet (our ancestors climbed trees as modern chimps do, grasping with both feet and hands). Our feet are beautifully adapted to bipedal walking, but you can still grasp objects between your big toe and the neighboring toe.
To: InvisibleChurch
24 posted on
08/26/2004 2:20:03 PM PDT by
Bloody Sam Roberts
(If you decide to kick the tiger in the ass...you'd better be prepared to deal with the teeth.)
To: InvisibleChurch
25 posted on
08/26/2004 2:20:27 PM PDT by
Bloody Sam Roberts
(If you decide to kick the tiger in the ass...you'd better be prepared to deal with the teeth.)
To: InvisibleChurch
If it's Tuesday, this must be Belgium.
26 posted on
08/26/2004 2:20:51 PM PDT by
Bloody Sam Roberts
(If you decide to kick the tiger in the ass...you'd better be prepared to deal with the teeth.)
To: InvisibleChurch; Religion Moderator
English was never your strong subject, was it? Can we please change the title to "do snakes have legs?" It's embarrassing.
29 posted on
08/26/2004 2:35:47 PM PDT by
kosta50
(Eastern Orthodoxy is pure Christianity)
To: InvisibleChurch
vanity - does snakes have legs?That's easy. It so they can walk from one campaign appearance to the next.
30 posted on
08/26/2004 2:35:48 PM PDT by
Onelifetogive
(* Sarcasm tag ALWAYS required. For some FReepers, sarcasm can NEVER be obvious enough.)
To: InvisibleChurch
Once again, the best spelling/grammar errors come in vanity posts.
34 posted on
08/26/2004 6:41:49 PM PDT by
sharktrager
(The road to hell is paved with good intentions. And the paving contractor lives in Chappaqua.)
To: InvisibleChurch

Yesh
35 posted on
08/26/2004 7:05:38 PM PDT by
Cagey
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