• Pennomi@lemmy.world
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      20 hours ago

      The bill was introduced in January by two Republican representatives, Bill Pigott and Lester Carpenter. Pigott, a beef and dairy farmer, has long been an opponent of alternative protein.

      The free market did decide! They bought their legislators fair and square!

  • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    I know this is just some anti-science nonsense, but the term “cultivated meat” sounds to me like factory farming. Nobody minds the science when it makes giant-breasted chickens and perfectly marbled cattle that grow larger and faster than what should be naturally possible. What’s the difference between cultivated meat in a petri dish or cultivated meat on an animal skeleton. Is it the pain that gives it flavor?

    • BertramDitore@lemm.ee
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      20 hours ago

      I think the main difference is that it’s incredibly expensive to get a cultivated meat facility going at any kind of meaningful scale. It takes a long time to grow the first batch, but then you basically just need to keep it “alive” in huge vats where it can propagate, under very precise and specific conditions. But it’s much much more expensive than maintaining a herd of live animals, at least to start.

      If they get the all the ratios right, I doubt there’d be much of a difference in taste. But you’re right that opposition is mostly from meat lobbyists and anti-science bullshit.

  • mindbleach
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    19 hours ago

    Moral panic, for evil reasons, over a thing that doesn’t meaningfully exist.