MMmmmm...Squirrel
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- ********0
- of course I laughed at this! HAHAHHAPoint5
- No, not again. I... why does it say paper jam when there is no paper jam? I swear to God, one of these days, I just kick this piece of shit out the window.5timuli
- piece of shit out the window.5timuli
- lol @ those last few seconds.
bloody cats.Nairn - baAHAHAHAHAAHA! omg that was awesome!kona
- AHAHAHAH. I FUCKIN LAUGHED SO LOUD @ THIS.
ESKEMA - HAHAHAHAAHAHHAHHA I AM PISSING MYSELFJnr_Madison
- pfahahahawinvisiblechamber
- Nairn0
"It's kinda cute, I'll put his lil tender butt in there"?
One thing is anthropomorphising pets - but dinner?
- CALLES0
thanks for that
worst part is little 7 year old being taught be crazed 90 pound redneck chick to use a shootgun
poor bastard is probably rocking a mullet now
- adamm0
That is quite disturbing, not eating squirrel but the way she acts. I have eaten and hunted squirrel before, but she made it seem VERY redneck!
- Point50
"You know how squirrels like nuts!"
- lajj0
- sea_sea0
"looks like a good weekend snack" i think i'm gonna be sick now...
during my trip to Peru i was offered guinea pig a few times. just couldn't get myself to try it.
- flashbender0
who the fuck hunts squirrels with a shotgun?
- ********0
Culinary preparations include scrambling the brains with eggs or putting them in a meat and vegetable stew referred to as "burgoo". A history of eating squirrel brains was obtained from family members of all five patients with probable or definite CJD seen over 3,5 years in a neurocognitive clinic in western Kentucky. Two women and three men aged from 56 to 78 years (mean 68.2 years) were affected. None were related and each lived in a different town. Eating squirrel brains was reported among 12 of 42 patients with Parkinson's disease seen in the same clinic and 27 of 100 age-matched controls without neurological disease living in western Kentucky. Ataxia early in the course of the disease was seen in four of the patients with CJD and myoclonus and periodic complexes on the electroencephalogram were seen in all.
Death occurred within 1 year in four, whereas, survival exceeded 3 years from the onset of symptoms in one patient. Analysis of codon 129 of the prion protein gene was not done. This observation will require confirmation by studies of larger populations, and a search for a scrapie agent in the brains of squirrels, which have not heretofore been reported as having spongiform encephalopathies. In the meantime caution might be exercised in the ingestion of this arboreal rodent.
