Recently, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has drawn attention to a 2018 "crash test" study1 at Wayne State University funded by the Ford Motor Company, in which twenty-seven living pigs were strung up by wires run through the adipose tissue near their spinal columns, and rammed with a high-impact lateral pendulum.
The study appears to reverse an organizational policy set by Ford in 2009 to refrain from using live animals in collision testing.
Given the difference in organ size and growth rates between humans and pigs, the research is of limited scientific value, as mentioned in the paper resulting from the study on pg. 374. In the next breath, the authors congratulate themselves on their "powerful research."
As it stands, the report is a masterpiece of dissociative thinking, covering over the brute fact of being with all the graphs and figures at the clinicians' disposal.