As a thinking experiment, let us consider that on the 1st of January of 2025 it is announced that an advance making possible growing any kind of animal tissue in laboratory conditions as been achieved and that it is possible to scale it in order to achieve industrial grade production level.

There is no limit on which animal tissues can be grown, so, any species is achieveable, only being needed a small cell sample from an animal to start production, and the cultivated tissues are safe for consumption.

There won’t be any perceiveable price change to the end consummer, as the growing is a complex and labour intensive process, requiring specialized equipments and personnel.

Would you change to this new diet option?

  • @Openopenopenopen@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    In a heartbeat. Although I’d prefer meat alternatives to lab grown meat. Like impossible burgers.

    I don’t eat a ton of meat, and I’d like to eat even less. this option would help me feel like I’m not making animals suffer just so I can survive.

    • Eugenia
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      -35 months ago

      Impossible burgers are extremely unhealthy, full of processed flours and additives. It’s best to not eat any “meat” at all, and instead eat whole vegan foods, than eat these things. Lab grown meat, if it’s like real meat, is much more desirable health-wise.

  • @HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    Reminder that the meat you buy at the grocery store is as also as human modified as it gets and NOTHING like the wild game that our ancestors ate or even the farm animals from 100 years ago. The animal itself is probably GMO, spends its entire life in a steel cage standing in its own shit and piss and is given specialized processed feed to optimize how much meat it produces (or just has a tube down its throat so we don’t have to worry about it eating fast enough). Not to mention tons of antibiotics that are given to the animal just to ensure it survives the hell we put them through which definitely makes it into the meat and therefore into you as well. And they’re slaughtered and butchered by underpaid overworked factory workers who have to balance fulfilling brutal quotas with carefully extracting the meat and not getting it contaminated with shit from the animal’s guts or the myriad other disgusting things around the meat that you wouldn’t want to eat (you can guess how well that usually goes).

    Animal cells (without the animal itself and also no central nervous system to experience suffering) growing in a clean, well controlled lab in tanks of sterile cell media doesn’t sound so bad in comparison.

    Additional reminder that nearly all of the worst infectious diseases in history have been caused partially or completely by animal agriculture: the plague, spanish flu, smallpox, whooping cough, swine flu, bird flu, covid, etc. So if you’re worried about the long term health implications of lab grown meat, you should be ten times more worried about long term the health implications of regular meat, to the point where you should be worried even if you don’t eat meat.

  • @eestileib@sh.itjust.works
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    175 months ago

    As long at it wasn’t even more destructive than normal cultivation (very much tbd), absolutely.

    I had no qualms about switching to Beyond Meat either.

    If we could figure out how to make a decent ribeye out of peas and seed oils, I’d prefer that to lab-grown too.

  • queermunist she/her
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    5 months ago

    I don’t really care about lab grown meat. Haven’t eaten meat for years, don’t really miss it that much since the plant based alternatives have gotten so good.

    Give me lab grown dairy.

    • @Count042@lemmy.ml
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      55 months ago

      100%

      I did hear, though I can’t remember where, that someone had successfully gotten yeast to produce the protein in milk that is required for cheese.

      I’m too lazy today to search for the article on it…

  • @Birdie@thelemmy.club
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    135 months ago

    I’ll move to it in a second. Protein with no need to slaughter animals would be so fantastic for the animals, the earth, and people.

  • Shimitar
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    125 months ago

    Yes, absolutely. No risk of virus or bacteria, or worse…

    Grown to the size you want…

    Of the shape and type you want…

    No fat (maybe?)…

    What’s not to like.

  • @Unmapped@lemmy.ml
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    115 months ago

    Its the only way I would eat meat again. But don’t think it will ever become a normal part of my diet again. The plant-based meat options are just as good and are healthier. They will only get better too.

  • @ramble81@lemm.ee
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    5 months ago

    How does it taste?
    How much does it cost?
    What’s the true environmental impact?

    If it’s the same, less and less, sure I’d be all for it.

  • @juliebean@lemm.ee
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    95 months ago

    hell yeah. soon as its not way more expensive than normal meat, i’m down. your proposed technology also sounds like it should mean lab grown replacement organs with zero chance of rejection, which would be amazing.

  • @zod000@lemmy.ml
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    95 months ago

    As long as it scaled to reasonably the same price as current meat, I’d absolutely do it unless there were some significant downsides like it somehow being even worse for the environment.

  • @electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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    65 months ago

    I’ve been vegan for almost 25 years, and vegetarian for couple years before that… and I’d be happy it existed, but I wouldn’t eat it. I don’t miss meat, and the idea of eating any of it just grosses me out.

    • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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      25 months ago

      Same, I get why beyond meat exists but I can’t touch the stuff myself and it sucks when that’s the only option available

      • @electric_nan@lemmy.ml
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        25 months ago

        I actually like Beyond/Impossible lol. I guess for me it’s about knowing that it’s made out of vegetables.

  • @communism@lemmy.ml
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    5 months ago

    You haven’t mentioned if there are any ethical concerns with this new meat; e.g. environmental cost of the production process, what kind of human labour is required to create it, who is providing that labour and under what conditions are they working.

    Provided I had no ethical concerns with it, sure, but a lot of modern innovations tend to have these issues and I assume lab-grown meat would have these issues too.

    Edit: Also, I’m opposed to animal captivity, so if there’s an ongoing need to collect samples from captive livestock then no, I wouldn’t. If it’s a “collect it once then it keeps reproducing from the lab samples forever” type of thing then sure.