At a workshop in southern California, students learn an ‘ethical’ version of a practice long associated with grizzled hunters: ‘We feel we’re giving animals a second chance’Four dead rats. Two white guinea pig carcasses. One lifeless brown rabbit. A group of women hovered tentatively over the bodies, holding scalpels.“Are we slicing all the way through?” asked KC Carmela, one of the attendees, a scalpel in one hand and a rodent in the other. “Like butter? Or a banana?” Continue reading…
At a workshop in southern California, students learn an ‘ethical’ version of a practice long associated with grizzled hunters: ‘We feel we’re giving animals a second chance’
Four dead rats. Two white guinea pig carcasses. One lifeless brown rabbit. A group of women hovered tentatively over the bodies, holding scalpels.
“Are we slicing all the way through?” asked KC Carmela, one of the attendees, a scalpel in one hand and a rodent in the other. “Like butter? Or a banana?”