Uncyclopedia: Alternative Medicine
Sunday, 1. January 2006, 17:24:15
Just found a link to a highly amusing site.
http://uncyclopedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
The site is described as "Uncyclopedia, the content-free encyclopedia that anyone can edit."
The featured article for today has been copied here as an example:
Alternative Medicine is a broad term describing those things which differ from actual medicine, which is hopelessly unhip and square. There are many fields of alternative medicine. None of them are quite as healthy as you putting the bong down and getting some fresh air and exercise, but what are the odds of that happening?
Inacupuncture: An offshoot of acupuncture. It differs from its parent discipline in that acupuncturists believe in lines of invisible force called chi which flow throughout the body. Inacupuncturists believe in jabbing people with sharp objects. Many people swear by this technique, saying that after people have finished jabbing them, they begin to feel much better. In recent years, some inacupuncturists have experimented with long distance inacupuncture, using high powered needle guns with telescopic sights. The results have been described as "disappointing".
Pros: Inexpensive, easy to learn, doubles as a sexual fetish, they won't be able to make a canoe out of you.
Cons: Hurts. A lot.
http://uncyclopedia.org/wiki/Main_Page
The site is described as "Uncyclopedia, the content-free encyclopedia that anyone can edit."
The featured article for today has been copied here as an example:
Alternative Medicine is a broad term describing those things which differ from actual medicine, which is hopelessly unhip and square. There are many fields of alternative medicine. None of them are quite as healthy as you putting the bong down and getting some fresh air and exercise, but what are the odds of that happening?
Inacupuncture: An offshoot of acupuncture. It differs from its parent discipline in that acupuncturists believe in lines of invisible force called chi which flow throughout the body. Inacupuncturists believe in jabbing people with sharp objects. Many people swear by this technique, saying that after people have finished jabbing them, they begin to feel much better. In recent years, some inacupuncturists have experimented with long distance inacupuncture, using high powered needle guns with telescopic sights. The results have been described as "disappointing".
Pros: Inexpensive, easy to learn, doubles as a sexual fetish, they won't be able to make a canoe out of you.
Cons: Hurts. A lot.






