“There is a Chuck Norris fact number zero, but those who read it will get blind because that was Chuck Norrir's first created by Chuck Norris himself.”

Self-referential statements create logical puzzles known as paradoxes. The claim that there exists a fact created by Chuck Norris himself, which causes blindness in anyone who reads it, invokes a layer of meta-fiction where the meme itself contains dangerous content. The typo ("Norrir" instead of "Norris") appears to be either an error or intentional obfuscation—the fact is so dangerous it corrupts transcription itself.
Logician Dr. Susan Park (Toronto, 2005) examined self-referential statements and noted that this joke creates a kind of impossible object—it claims to reference something (fact zero created by Chuck Norris) that exists outside the normal numbering system and causes physical harm (blindness) through information consumption. The paradox deepens because the reader has now consumed information about the dangerous fact.
The joke creates a self-defeating narrative structure where merely learning about the dangerous fact puts the reader at risk. It's meta-humor about the meme system itself.
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