Could a human being eat a live rat and not get sick?

No, no. As we grab the live mouse by the tail, hold it above our head and lower it toward our mouth so we can bite into it… is there any chance this rodent once belonged to Richard Gere?

I hope you floss regularly.:eek:

::d&r::

Not too necessary, Crotalus’ fangs are the only teeth to have significant contact with the muskrat, and after it’s envenomed he just swallows it whole.

Are we allowed to cook it? If so, and you cook it well, you’ll be fine. If not, you’ll still be fine, but of course, with a lower probabiltiy.

In his autobiography Will, G. Gordon Liddy ate a rat, to overcome his fear of them. He cooked it first. IIRC, he suffered no ill affects.

Rats carry Leptisporosus, which is something you really, really don’t want to get.

Not sure that i spelled it correctly.

Just came across thiswhile looking for some info for another thread.

So, yeah, there are instances where eating raw, living animals has been necessary for survival.

No ill effects reported.

People eat mice regularly and voluntarily. Search for “three squeaks”. For example: http://www.culinaryschools.org/blog/three-squeaks/

Live rat, or, as a freebie, a dead-by-stomped-on rat.
The buggers have teeth. How does the human digestive system handle those as the animal is lowered down the tilted head?

Pretty easily. Teeth dissolve rapidly in acid, the human stomach is pretty damn acidic.

Even if the teeth weren’t digested, there would be little danger from them. They would simply pass through.

I’d be concerned, even if I was starving, that a live rat would scratch the hell out of my throat as it went down. I’d definitely want to swing it by the tail onto a rock and bash its brains out before I ate it.

Having swallowed one of my baby teeth when it was loose (it felt exactly like a marshmallow-coated Rice Krispie piece, which is what I was eating) I can assure you the human digestive system would handle it the same way it handles anything else: it passes through. :wink: