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8 answers

OH---quite good, luv. A little playfulness is spot-on. Quite funny, actually. I will pose it at my next staff meeting.

I can assure you if being a Cassandra was a cause of death, a good portion of those who replied to your question have very short lives. What bores!

2007-09-20 05:10:58 · answer #1 · answered by Skully 4 · 0 1

This is not a question about vegetarianism.

Natural causes are deaths that result from normal organ failure and are not caused by disease. Eating natural has nothing to do with natural death.

2007-09-20 21:15:30 · answer #2 · answered by KathyS 7 · 1 0

Because a lot of people who die of natural causes don't necessarily eat a natural diet.

Because not everything natural is good for you.

And because everyone dies.

The question really is how old the person who dies of "natural causes" is.

2007-09-20 11:45:58 · answer #3 · answered by VeggieTart -- Let's Go Caps! 7 · 1 0

Dude, it's just not the same. Natural death is usually due to extreme age, the parts just wear out and cease to function.

2007-09-20 11:38:30 · answer #4 · answered by Phurface 6 · 2 0

Good question, we should all eat unnaturally from now on to try and outwit nature.

Eating animals artifically fed hormone growth foods and reared in cages is a good way to achieve this unnatural diet.

Afterall, what could be more unnatural that eating a herbivore cow fed with ground up dead cows compressed into pellets

2007-09-20 12:02:38 · answer #5 · answered by Michael H 7 · 6 0

Because 100% of people will eventually die.

2007-09-20 11:37:11 · answer #6 · answered by Student Doctor House 6 · 6 0

Death: our nation's number one killer.

2007-09-20 11:42:46 · answer #7 · answered by Xander Crews 4 · 6 0

HAHAHAHHA!!!!!!!!

2007-09-20 18:07:18 · answer #8 · answered by salmonella_jr 3 · 1 0

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