
WHY DID THE CHICKEN CROSS
THE ROAD?
Aristotle: To actualize its potential.
Roseanne Barr: Urrrrrp. What chicken?
Roland Barthes: The chicken wanted to expose the myth of
the road.
Wolfgang von Beethoven: What? Speak up.
Bill the Cat: Oop Ack. Ppthpt.
Buddha: If you ask this question, you deny your own
chicken-nature.
George Bush: To face a kinder, gentler thousand points of
headlights.
Caesar: To come, to see, to conquer.
Candide: To cultivate its garden.
Joseph Conrad: Mistah Chicken, he dead.
Howard Cosell: It may very well have been one of the most
astonishing events to grace the annals of history. An
historic, unprecedented avian biped with the temerity to
attempt such an herculean achievement formerly relegated
to homo sapien pedestrians is truly a remarkable
occurrence.
Salvador Dali: The fish.
Darwin: It was the logical next step after coming down
from the trees.
Thomas Dequincy: Because it ran out of opium.
Rene Descartes: It had sufficient reason to believe it
was dreaming anyway.
Emily Dickinson: Because it could not stop for death.
Bob Dylan: How many roads must one chicken cross?
Ralph Waldo Emerson: It didn't cross the road; it
transcended it.
Epicurus: For fun.
Paul Erdos: It was forced to do so by the chicken-hole
principle.
Basil Fawlty: Oh, don't mind that chicken. It's from
Barcelona.
Pierre de Fermat: I just don't have room here to give the
full explanation.
Gerald R. Ford: It probably fell from an airplane and
couldn't stop its forward momentum.
Michel Foucault: It did so because the dicourse of
crossing the road left it no choice; the police state was
oppressing it.
Sigmund Freud: The chicken was obviously female and
obviously interpreted the pole on which the crosswalk
sign was mounted as a phallic symbol of which she was
envious, selbstverstaendlich.
Robert Frost: To cross the road less traveled by.
Zsa Zsa Gabor: It probably crossed to get a better look
at my legs, which, thank goodness, are good, dahling.
Gilligan: The traffic started getting rough; the chicken
had to cross. If not for the plumage of its peerless
tail, the chicken would be lost. The chicken would be
lost!
Johann Friedrich von Goethe: The eternal hen-principle
made it do it.
Werner Heisenberg: We are not sure which side of the road
the chicken was on, but it was moving very fast.
Ernest Hemingway: To die. In the rain.
David Hume: Out of custom and habit.
Saddam Hussein: This was an unprovoked act of rebellion
and we were quite justified in dropping 50 tons of nerve
gas on it.
Lee Iacocca: It found a better car, which was on the
other side of the road.
John Paul Jones: It has not yet begun to cross!
James Joyce: Once upon a time, a nicens little chicken
named baby tuckoo crossed the road and met a moocow
coming down...
Immanuel Kant: Because it was a duty.
Jacques Lacan: Because of its desire for *object a*.
H. P. Lovecraft: To escape the eldritch, cthonic, rugose,
polypous, indescribably horrible abomination not from our
space-time continuum.
Paul de Man: The chicken did not really cross the road
because one side and the other are not really opposites
in the first place.
Paul de Man (uncovered after his death): So no one would
find out it wrote for a collaborationist Belgian
newspaper during the early
years of World War II.
Groucho Marx: Chicken? What's all this talk about
chicken? Why, I had an uncle who thought he was a
chicken. My aunt almost divorced him, but we needed the
eggs.
Karl Marx: To escape the bourgeois middle-class struggle.
Alfred E. Neumann: What? Me worry?
Newton: Chickens at rest tend to stay at rest. Chickens
in motion tend to cross the road.
Jack Nicholson: 'Cause it (censored) wanted to. That's
the (censored) reason.
J. Danforth Quayle: Ite sawe ae potatoee.
Ronald Reagan: Well, I forget.
William Shakespeare: I don't know why, but methinks I
could rattle off a hundred-line soliloquy without much
ado.
Sisyphus: Was it pushing a rock, too?
Socrates: To pick up some hemlock at the corner druggist.
The Sphinx: You tell me.
Mr. T: If you saw me coming, you'd cross the road too!
Margaret Thatcher: There was no alternative.
Mark Twain: The news of its crossing has been greatly
exaggerated.
George Washington: Actually, it crossed the Delaware with
me back in 1776. But most history books don't reveal that
I bunked with a birdie during the duration.
Mae West: I invited it to come up and see me sometime.
Walt Whitman: To cluck the song of itself.

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