Well, kingfoot, I am on this side too. But 'space' didn't exist outside of this 'explosion'. What me call 'space-time' expanded from the so-called big-bang (so-called, in that it didn't really 'bang', rather, it expanded).
Excuse me people, did none of you see 1 Million Years BC? That movie proves people lived at the same time as dinosaurs. Before you start dissing kid's menus, please check your facts!
Mmm... dinosaur. Tasty, with a bit of ketchup.Damn it, now I'm hungry!Also, off-topic, but I'm really hating this site since the re-design. The "CAPTCHA" system only seems to work about 50% of the time.
madotakuJun 24, 2007
Well, kingfoot, I am on this side too. But 'space' didn't exist outside of this 'explosion'. What me call 'space-time' expanded from the so-called big-bang (so-called, in that it didn't really 'bang', rather, it expanded).
danpatJun 24, 2007
The back of the menu was even better, "Scientists have theorized that the T-Rex could probably breathe fire".
raskaliJun 24, 2007
Excuse me people, did none of you see 1 Million Years BC? That movie proves people lived at the same time as dinosaurs. Before you start dissing kid's menus, please check your facts!
calumsJun 25, 2007
Jesus was a dinosaur
rderveloyJun 25, 2007
Not when you look at the actual definition of Dinosaur: Dinosaur: "Any chiefly terrestrial, herbivorous or carnivorous reptile of the extinct orders Saurischia and Ornithischia, from the Mesozoic Era, certain species of which are the largest known land animals. " - dinosaur. (n.d.). Dictionary.com Unabridged (v 1.1). Retrieved June 25, 2007, from Dictionary.com website: <a class="user" href="http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/dinosaur">http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/dinosaur</a>Extinct: "No longer existing or living: an extinct species. " -extinct. (n.d.). The American Heritage? Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Retrieved June 25, 2007, from Dictionary.com website: <a class="user" href="http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/extinct">http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/extinct</a>"In order for dinosaurs to exist with us today, you would need to alter the definition of a dinosaur. Evolutionary decedents of dinosaurs and other animals that existed at the same time as dinosaurs do exist with us today, but they are not dinosaurs.One choice example is the Komodo Dragon. If not a direct descended of dinosaurs, It is obviously a descendent of an animal that existed with the dinosaurs. However, it belongs to the order Squamata, and therefore, it is not a dinosaur: <a class="user" href="http://www.seaworld.org/animal-info/Animal-Bytes/animalia/eumetazoa/coelomates/deuterostomes/chordata/craniata/reptilia/squamata/komodo-dragon.htm">http://www.seaworld.org/animal-info/Animal-Bytes/animalia/eumetazoa/coelomates/deuterostomes/chordata/craniata/reptilia/squamata/komodo-dragon.htm</a>
kurtu5Jun 25, 2007
Who created God?
mikethecJun 28, 2007
Mmm... dinosaur. Tasty, with a bit of ketchup.Damn it, now I'm hungry!Also, off-topic, but I'm really hating this site since the re-design. The "CAPTCHA" system only seems to work about 50% of the time.