An old house, a geek, a cute transvestite, a very tall lesbian, and at least one ghost–what could happen? – Adult situations and artistic nudity. Not suitable for children.
Going in forward order it seems the ghost story is skipped over after the Gally post. But upon backing up you catch the ghost story instead. Forwards it’s skipped, backwards it’s fine.
Unless Andy fixes it, if two comics have the same posting date then it only shows the first one you come to. If you’re going backwards you see the second, but not the first.
Detectives would need a very strong incentive (something like being outright TOLD where the body went) to gather up numerous samples of pigshit (scattered all around a muddy sty, so they might need to collect 100 samples to be sure they find it). I think it’s still a pretty safe method for corpse disposal.
…Provided, of course, it’s your farm and you control who comes and goes there day-to-day. I wouldn’t recommend just throwing a body into a local pig farmers’ pen and walking away. When that farmer gets up in the morning and sees one of his pigs chewing on a hand, he’ll be calling the cops pretty fast. DNA testing of the feces probably won’t even be necessary.
Also while pigs will eat the flesh and crunch up a fair quantity of bone, there are likely po be portions left over for a time, not to mention the teeth that have string odds of passing through still identifiable as human, and you can get a DNA sample from a molar.
If you punch the molar out of someone’s mouth, sure — hell, it might still have blood on it — but after it’s passed through an animal’s digestive tract? An animal specifically noted for having an unusually long, thorough digestive tract comparable to humans’? It’ll probably be half its original size and not much left but the hard ivory-ish parts.
The pulp inside the tooth retains DNA for millennia. They have identified the descendants of Incan cave sacrifices by comparing extracted DNA from the teeth of the skeleton.
Isn’t there suppose to be a ghost story before this page?
Ah! There it is now.
Going in forward order it seems the ghost story is skipped over after the Gally post. But upon backing up you catch the ghost story instead. Forwards it’s skipped, backwards it’s fine.
Unless Andy fixes it, if two comics have the same posting date then it only shows the first one you come to. If you’re going backwards you see the second, but not the first.
1
2A
Skipped
3
Or
3
2B
Skipped
1
My nephew has five pigs. Time to take them to the dismantler. All together they weigh about a ton.
Full grown, they should total up to between 1.25 – 1.75 tons, depending on breed. (250-350kg each).
Detectives would need a very strong incentive (something like being outright TOLD where the body went) to gather up numerous samples of pigshit (scattered all around a muddy sty, so they might need to collect 100 samples to be sure they find it). I think it’s still a pretty safe method for corpse disposal.
…Provided, of course, it’s your farm and you control who comes and goes there day-to-day. I wouldn’t recommend just throwing a body into a local pig farmers’ pen and walking away. When that farmer gets up in the morning and sees one of his pigs chewing on a hand, he’ll be calling the cops pretty fast. DNA testing of the feces probably won’t even be necessary.
Also while pigs will eat the flesh and crunch up a fair quantity of bone, there are likely po be portions left over for a time, not to mention the teeth that have string odds of passing through still identifiable as human, and you can get a DNA sample from a molar.
If you punch the molar out of someone’s mouth, sure — hell, it might still have blood on it — but after it’s passed through an animal’s digestive tract? An animal specifically noted for having an unusually long, thorough digestive tract comparable to humans’? It’ll probably be half its original size and not much left but the hard ivory-ish parts.
The pulp inside the tooth retains DNA for millennia. They have identified the descendants of Incan cave sacrifices by comparing extracted DNA from the teeth of the skeleton.