My Polyvore Sets

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Q & A

This post is all about questions. Questions that, with the right answer, might just change the world. Please please please comment if you have an answer for any of these questions (don't worry, there are no wrong answers). 

Okay, here goes. 

1. If the president of the US were to pass a law saying that you couldn't drink orange juice in the shower, would you be angry? When I asked my mom this, she told me to stop talking and to go away... Everyone laughs, but here's the thing. If he had this law passed, it would generally state that he/she (it could happen) could pass a law, even if it was ridiculous. If he couldn't, it might mean that he's really bad at getting laws passed. 

2. Is Peter Pan real? This is the only question that has a wrong answer, and that I know the answer to.

3. What is a 'Wubby"??? Some of the people I know have them... I just don't understand...

4. Is anyone really sure how time works? It can be explained so many different ways: Straight lines, circles, wibbly wobbly timey whimey, strings... everything. It's just so confusing!!!!

5. Is there any time you will *ever* use the mathematical properties? Come on, be truthful now. 

6. Why is acting nerdy?

7. Why is everyone so against cereal and juice/eggs and ketchup? Including me?

8. Why do Barbie Dolls all look the same? Who else would think it was weird if little girls each had a plastic copy of you that they dressed and undressed all the time? Who else knew that Ken was gay? (no problem with that, but I thought that Barbie and Ken always went out.) 

9. Why do we learn about the Big Bang if scientists aren't sure if that's how everything began???

10. Why did Kamikaze pilots where helmets?


Please please please put your answers and any other questions that you have in a comment. 

2 comments:

  1. The Big Bang theory: since most explosion start out small (dynamite sticks, uninflated balloons, etc.) and since the universe is expanding, scientists believe that since it is expanding, it must have started doing so with an explosion; only a whole lot of force could have pushed matter apart so quickly. There is also evidence in the form of microwaves and other forms of electromagnetic radiation that support the Big Bang.

    Did that help? Or did I just make things even more confusing?

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