A group of vegan activists paid homage to dead animals in a bizarre way. They placed red roses in a funeral style, on the fresh meat in a supermarket. The video resurfaced on Twitter and gained massive views.
Vegans Throw Roses On Meat At Counter To 'Pay Homage To The Fallen'
Vegans protesting at supermarket meat counters is a commonplace occurence, but things took a turn for the bizarre when a group of vegans decided to place red roses on packaged meat to mourn the dead animals.
The vegans took it upon themselves to 'pay homage' to the produce in a funeral-style fashion.

The video, which is from a couple of years back but has recently resurfaced on Twitter, sees a handful of people crowd around the meat counter at a supermarket in black clothes.
Orchestral music plays in the background, as one protester steps forward with three roses.

He delicately places them on the produce throughout the counter - which has a Fresh Meat sign above it.
Another then follows suit as she scatters the roses on the right-hand section.
The video in question has amassed an impressive 1.1k likes nearly 1k quote tweets and over 300 retweets.
Hundreds flocked to share their views on the 'homage' video.
One Twitter user posted: "I don't know how many years my brain can handle this planet. Everything nowadays is a video captured virtue signal for an ate up cause."

"If y’all could keep doing this my wife loves when I bring home flowers and a steak to cook," a third added.
Some seemed to be exhausted by the content of the video, with one Twitter user posting: "That’s enough Twitter for today."
Others attempted to open up the debate surrounding veganism.
Some found the video embarrassing with one person commenting: "Never help themselves these lot do they?" while another pondered: "How do you do something like this without dying of cringe?"
"This is the most respectable thing they have done so far. I'm surprised they didn't throw blood at the end of the video," wrote one person.
The news follows vegan activists supergluing themselves to Muller lorries in Droitwich, Worcestershire, last week.
Others, however, compared the rose-laying to alternative forms of animal rights protests.
"This is the most respectable thing they have done so far. I'm surprised they didn't throw blood at the end of the video," wrote one person.