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23 votes
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Feeding Bill Gates a Fake Burger (to save the world)
4 votes -
KFC to sell Beyond Meat's plant-based 'fried chicken' in the southern US
18 votes -
High risk of injuries in Denmark's live piglet export trade – cheaper labour and costs have driven animal exports from Denmark to Poland, but critics fear corners are being cut
4 votes -
Iceland didn't hunt any whales in 2019 – and public appetite for whale meat is fading
6 votes -
Would you eat lab grown human meat?
This question popped up between my friends and I when we were discussing the possibilities of lab grown meat. When discussing lab grown meat, one of the arguments for it is that it is far more...
This question popped up between my friends and I when we were discussing the possibilities of lab grown meat. When discussing lab grown meat, one of the arguments for it is that it is far more ethical to consume as it didn't originate from a living, conscious being. But if you replace the meat being grown in a lab to human meat rather than fish or beef, is it still less ethical? Or is it something that will be seen as incredibly taboo to the point where it should be outlawed?
I would be curious to read your thoughts and points of view on this!
For me, it's going to be a hard no that it shouldn't it be done. But to be honest, I feel like my feelings regarding it come from an emotional perspective rather than a logical one.
Edit: Let's throw in lab grown human organs as well. Say these are the organs that aren't suitable for transplant, but are perfectly edible.
36 votes -
Denmark's industrial pig farms are stunningly productive, but there is another side to their success
5 votes -
Icelander livestreams ten-year-old McDonald's cheeseburger – Hjörtur Smárason bought his McDonald's meal in 2009 to see how long it would take to decompose
13 votes -
Can you turn a grape into a "meat berry"? - Tissue recellularization
2 votes -
Headline Whiplash: Red meat is good for you now? (Research meta-review)
4 votes -
Meatless meat is becoming mainstream — and it’s sparking a backlash
15 votes -
Is anyone else interested in (or actively pursuing) meat from more ethical and sustainable sources?
I consider both industrial meat production and veganism to be sub-optimal across all dimensions. I've recently jumped into this growing niche market for more sustainable and ethical meat. It's a...
I consider both industrial meat production and veganism to be sub-optimal across all dimensions. I've recently jumped into this growing niche market for more sustainable and ethical meat. It's a little more pricey, unless you buy in bulk (e.g. 1/4 to full cow at a time), but I think it's worth it in the end.
I'm looking to share sources of info and network of producers/farms in this regard. Allan Savory has the Savory Institute which I found to be a good start. Though FYI there have been back-and-forth essays written about the criticism and defense of these practices (too many to post here but easy to find in the two above links).
I found one local family-operated farm that practices e.g. "organic" (in this case no herb/pest/fungi-cide) farming (crops for the animals), legitimate free-roaming chickens and sustainable land management that allows soil and ecology equilibration (reducing fertilizer use and subsequent runoff). Plus, buying and directly supporting local farmers and ranchers is always a plus!
EDIT: I foresee this thread being hijacked towards a discussion about how "meat is bad" and how we eat too much meat etc. I am being narrow here because I want to be pragmatic, rather than opine on global economics and dietary needs.
15 votes -
Scientist who discredited meat guidelines didn’t report past food industry ties
8 votes -
Meat isn’t evil, it’s how we raise it, how it’s prepared, and what it’s eaten with
9 votes -
The schools where meat is off the menu for climate reasons
8 votes -
How Texas barbecue found a home in rural Sweden
7 votes -
Is a meat-free diet really as healthy as vegetarians claim?
6 votes -
Impossible at home
8 votes -
We put a “sin tax” on cigarettes and alcohol. Why not meat?
15 votes -
America is obsessed with beef. But it has no use for hides, so leather prices plunge
9 votes -
Finland urges EU to consider banning Brazilian beef over Amazon fires
25 votes -
If we want to save the world, we have to eat less meat
22 votes -
This is the beginning of the end of the beef industry
15 votes -
If we all ate enough fruits and vegetables, there'd be big shortages
12 votes -
Beyond Meat is working on fake bacon and steak
11 votes -
Socialist People's Party wants a debate on whether it should be legal to produce and sell French delicacy foie gras in the EU
8 votes -
Vegetarian protein is just as 'complete' as meat, despite what we've been taught
25 votes -
Beyond Meat has hit the ‘short-squeeze trifecta’ as borrow fees keep soaring
18 votes -
Would you eat a burger made out of CO2 captured from the air?
9 votes -
So far cultured meat has been burgers – the next big challenge is animal-free steaks
6 votes -
Mississippi is forbidding grocery stores from calling veggie burgers “veggie burgers”
21 votes -
Will Impossible Burgers be the norm for Gen Z?
20 votes -
In defense of the salmon burger
4 votes -
Impossible Burger shortages hit White Castle and Red Robin
11 votes -
Sausage expert guesses cheap vs expensive sausage | Price Points
9 votes -
Empire of meat
2 votes -
Is meat bad for you? Is meat unhealthy?
10 votes -
American bull - The story of American beef is like the story of the nation as a whole: a mashup of history and myth, bloody and contested
6 votes -
The rise of meatless meat, explained: Nine questions about meat alternatives you were too embarrassed to ask
8 votes -
Impossible Foods’ rising empire of almost-meat
7 votes -
The aesthetic case for fake meat: Eating vegan meat substitutes is more than the ethical choice, it’s the delicious one.
12 votes -
The meatless Whopper’s ‘Impossible’ goal: To save the planet
7 votes -
To cook a steak, first you must unlearn what you have learned
12 votes -
Can food choices reduce greenhouse gas emissions?
5 votes -
Behold the beefless ‘Impossible Whopper’
23 votes -
Lab-grown meat and ancient grains – what will be on the menu in 2050?
3 votes -
The US government has redefined “pink slime” as ground beef
16 votes -
The mysterious, stubborn appeal of mass-produced fried chicken
10 votes -
The world’s most expensive ham
7 votes -
Should there be a tax on red meat?
23 votes