Artist Laura Ginn recently hosted an extravagant dinner in Manhattan to complement her art show, "Tomorrow We Will Feast Again On What We Catch." The dinner was made with rat meat, and the artist wore a fur coat made from the pelts of 300 rats.
Catching and eating animals for survival is one thing, but Ginn purchased and used medical rats from California. She used thousands of dollars solicited from the public to fund the exhibition and dinner. Despite the exhibition's primitive survivalist motif, the use of medical rats in this fashion was indulgent and glamorized animal exploitation for the sake of art. Eating wild rats is dangerous because of the diseases they carry, so the dinner/performance art had little if any educational value from a survivalist perspective.
In the beginning of
April, I started a
petition to urge the FDA
to stop requiring any
animal testing on any
drugs. I almost have
3,000 signatures, but I
need your help to get
more! We need to show the
FDA that we won't stand
for this any more.
Please,...
Joseph Kony deserves to
be arrested tomorrow.
He's spent two decades
committing horrific
crimes against humanity.
However, if he were to be
arrested, would the
children be safe? Not in
the least. So, what can
you do? 1. Only buy
fair trade 2...