ha ha ha ...is this true????? seriously?
2006-11-01 04:30:24
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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There is no reason to be scared. I had a hamster when that flu thing was going around that you could catch from little rodents and I never got it and I played with my hamster all the time. And for biteing , they do bite and sometimes draw blood. I really dont know why people freak out. A racoon could come up and give you rabies. Your dog could catch the dog flu and give it to you. Hamsters could make you catch something and die. (you proberly would not die) I like hamsters. If you want a hamster , get one. Thats all im saying. So my answer would be: no, there is no reason to be scared!
2006-11-01 04:33:37
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answer #2
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answered by Jill 2
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Your hamster appears like mine. he's 17 months previous, and he loves his mattress thank you to a lot, yet he has continuously been the comparable. He has on no account used his workout wheel and in basic terms gets up at night for a couple of minutes right here and there then is going off to mattress returned, yet one element that on no account changes is his love for nutrition. At our hamsters point in existence they are center elderly (hamsters stay to tell the tale prevalent 2-3 years) so their would be symptoms of your hamster needless to say slowing down. yet using fact there's a transformation in her ingesting conduct and character you are able to desire to take her to the vets so which you will get the splendid diagnosis.
2016-10-21 02:24:18
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The Government have a committee looking at hamsters? How bizarre! I suppose they could always pin a, 'Buying Hamsters Kills' sticker on their ears, so that (like cigarettes) the buyer is well aware of the dangers. How much are these people paid for heaven's sake? What an amazing waste of resources!
2006-11-01 04:45:28
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answer #4
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answered by Val G 5
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they only live for 2 or 3 years
2006-11-01 04:31:56
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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22 fatal attacks? never heard of that... but its probly little kids who try to bite their heads off and he hamsters use self defence. The govermment should stop warning people.
2006-11-01 06:02:18
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answer #6
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answered by lucas l 1
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There are far more important things to warn people about, but if they're really worried about hamsters (?!!!) then they should promote the importance of having tetanus shots instead - it'd be more acceptable that way!
2006-11-01 04:39:26
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answer #7
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answered by Melanie D 2
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are hamsters dangerous?
i never knew!
£15 million is obviously not enough as the message cant be getting through!
2006-11-01 04:35:16
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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lol... I have 9 hamsters in my house right now. One just had pups. Fatal attacks, eh? Well then. I might just die.
2006-11-01 04:37:19
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answer #9
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answered by wrecked 2
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I don't think so-- I've owned 3 hamsters and all three were perfectly sweet and easy to handle.
2006-11-01 07:07:07
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answer #10
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answered by :) 2
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Only 22? LMAO. Evil little b*stards.
2006-11-01 04:31:15
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answer #11
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answered by marcia_mahoya 3
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