SHOWS YOU JUST HOW MUCH THEY HATE US!!

If you have not been paying attention to the “advances” in the world of “nutrition”, agriculture, technology and lab created foods… you probably need to look into it.

The ruling elite believe that you are their property.  Now that they have perfected their technology, they see you as useless eaters.  IF they must feed you, they want to feed you at the absolute minimal cost to them.  They see all the world’s resources as their personal property.  They don’t like anyone wasting their resources.

So therefore, they are seeking out and/or creating alternative methods for feeding the masses.

In this post, we will look into the latest “food” technology in order to shed some light on what is happening in this area and why.  You may be surprised, you may be shocked and/or you may be angered by what you see today.

 

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Eat meat to save the world

Opinion, Culture

Jun 6, 2020

A recent New York Times article claims that “If you care about the working poor, about racial justice, and about climate change, you have to stop eating animals.” This isn’t quite right.

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In a recent New York Times op-ed titled The End of Meat is Here,” author Jonathan Foer claims that “If you care about the working poor, about racial justice, and about climate change, you have to stop eating animals.

This isn’t quite right.

When the “food pyramid” was released in 1970, we thought we finally understood the problem with red meat. Since then, Americans have dutifully followed the food pyramid, and red meat consumption per capita is down almost 30 percent.

We now have sickest population in the history of the world. I was one of those sick people.

Over $1.7 trillion is spent annually on chronic disease in the US. This tidal wave of sickness has only accelerated with dietary recommendations to continue to limit red meat and fat intake.

There is growing body of evidence that maybe there is another path forward. I only eat beef. My body was so riddled with autoimmune issues that this is the only way I can be healthy. It’s a vegan’s worst nightmare but it shouldn’t be – and I’ll outline the reasons below. I reversed severe rheumatoid arthritis and depression by doing the exact opposite of what the mainstream recommends. It’s nearly impossible to believe and I wouldn’t have believed it 5 years ago, but here I am.

The real problem with red meat is that we’re not eating enough of it.

Let us explain.

We’ve been misled by poor, associational data that has been misinterpreted since the 1960s.

According to Jonathan: “We can live longer, healthier lives without it. Most American adults eat roughly twice the recommended intake of protein — including vegetarians, who consume 70 percent more than they need. People who eat diets high in animal protein are more likely to die of heart disease, diabetes and kidney failure.” Almost none of this is true.

Approximately 75 percent of calories around the globe come from plant foods and there have been dozens of studies debunking the claim that red meat causes disease.  This paper reviewed randomized controlled trials that evaluated red meats effect on cancer and cardiovascular outcomes. The authors found no significant links between red meat intake and increased risk of heart disease or cancer. In 2019, after reviewing all available evidence, 19 BMJ researchers called for us to retract guidance on reducing saturated fat as evidence no longer supports it. New studies show that diets high in red meat may be associated with longer lives. Red meat consumption is even associated with longer telomeres (a known anti-aging factor).

Last year’s PURE study of 140,000 individuals from 18 countries revealed the following:

  • Animal protein is associated with lower risk of mortality.
  • Saturated fat is associated with lower risk of coronary vascular disease.
  • The highest fat intake is associated with 20 percent lower risk of death.
  • The highest carb intake is associated with 28 percent higher risk of death.

By comparison, the study that informed the food pyramid was only conducted on seven countries and is littered with flaws.
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Eight Asian studies following 300,000 people for 6 to 15 years found that “red meat intake was INVERSELY associated with CVD mortality in men and with cancer mortality in women.” This study of 56,000 British individuals found no significant difference in death rates between vegetarians and meat eaters. The claim that high-protein diets damage kidney function? This meta-analysis of almost 2,000 people showed that high-protein diets do not adversely affect kidney function.

Source: nutritiondata.self.com

Studies of plant-based diets consistently show lower levels of vitamins and minerals including zinc, copper, seleniumironcalciumvitamin a and vitamin b12. These are critical for all metabolic processes. The vegan diet likely to be deficient (sometimes even absent) in a number of nutrients. You need to supplement on a vegan diet.

Zinc, DHA, Vitamin B12, Iron and Vitamin B6 deficiencies have all been linked to depression and gut disorders [*[*]. DHA, one of the most important nutrients for your brain, is almost completely absent from plant foods (other than algae, which I’m sure we can all agree is not a practical fixture in anyone’s diet). Plants contain ALA and EPA, which have to be converted to DHA. This is an inefficient process when you can just eat animal products.

The Mayo Clinic underscores this argument, asserting: “Vegans may be at increased risk for deficiencies in vitamin B12, iron, calcium, vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, and protein.”

Plants are also deficient in nutritionally essential amino acids and bioactives such as taurine, carnosine and creatine, all three of which are essential for cognitive function and antioxidant status. This study even found that vegetarians who supplemented creatine improved their working memory (creatine supplementation did not affect those who already consumed meat). Another study found that carnitine supplementation resolved depressive symptoms better than a placebo.

Protein is also another issue with the vegan and vegetarian movement. According to this study, almost 1 billion people worldwide suffer from protein deficiencies. Plant protein alone cannot rectify these issues. It’s a poor source of amino acids.

Bottom line: Plants, contrary to popular belief, aren’t the superfood they’ve been made out to be.

Red meat, on the other hand, is critical for health and loaded with the nutrients many people are deficient in.

But what about the climate? Will we even have a world to live in if we all eat red meat?

In Foer’s article, he claims “We cannot protect our environment while continuing to eat meat regularly. This is not a refutable perspective, but a banal truism.”

This oft cited “truism” is factually false. According to a full lifecycle analysis conducted by the EPA, all of agriculture combined produces 9 percent of greenhouse gases in the US. Livestock accounts for 4 percent of those emissions. Now some simple math: what would that put plant-based agriculture at? Yes, 5 percent. More than livestock. Meanwhile, transportation alone produces 28 percent of greenhouse gases.

Red meat is a red herring when it comes to climate change — just another attempt to rescue the failed hypothesis that red meat causes disease. Now, it is true that some of this monocrop agriculture is going to feedlot-raised livestock. However, 66 percent of this feed goes to humans, and this number increases if we transform our farming to more regenerative practices. Foer goes on to quote: “eating a plant-based diet is ‘the most important contribution every individual can make to reversing global warming.’ But according to the National Academy of Sciences, if we eliminated all animal-based agriculture, we’d only reduce greenhouse gases by 2.6 percent. What then?

Foer is right that a large portion of climate change and greenhouses gases do come from the food industry. But they don’t come from cows. Monocrop agriculture, the common practice of growing a single crop year after year on the same land, is decimating our soil. According to physician Mark Hyman in his book Food Fix, “a third to 40 percent of all the carbon in the atmosphere today that’s causing climate volatility is from the loss of soil.” Monocrop agriculture destroys the soil and kills the living matter in it, preventing it from adequately storing carbon. Soil is the biggest problem and the most promising solution when it comes to climate change.
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SOIL = LAND  There is a more important reason for our food problem.  The LAND belongs to the Lord. God laid out the perfect plan for agriculture.  Modern agricultural practices defy God and prevent people from understanding His provision and the importance of the SABBATH. This is due to influence of the FALLEN and their REBELLION.
GOD’s PLAN FOR THE LAND
The concept of allowing the land to rest every seventh year is rooted in the biblical principle of the Sabbath, extending beyond the weekly day of rest to a sabbatical year for the land. This practice is primarily outlined in the Old Testament, specifically in the books of Exodus, Leviticus, and Deuteronomy. It reflects a divine ordinance that emphasizes trust in God’s provision, stewardship of creation, and social justice.Biblical FoundationThe commandment for the land to rest is first introduced in Exodus 23:10-11: “For six years you are to sow your land and gather its produce, but in the seventh year you must let it rest and lie fallow, so that the poor among your people may eat; and the wild animals may consume what they leave. Do the same with your vineyard and olive grove.This passage highlights the dual purpose of the sabbatical year: ecological sustainability and provision for the needy.Leviticus 25:1-7 provides further details on this practice: “The LORD said to Moses on Mount Sinai, ‘Speak to the Israelites and say to them: When you enter the land I am giving you, the land itself must observe a Sabbath to the LORD. For six years you may sow your field and prune your vineyard and gather its crops. But in the seventh year there shall be a Sabbath of complete rest for the landa Sabbath to the LORD. You are not to sow your field or prune your vineyard. You are not to reap the aftergrowth of your harvest or gather the grapes of your untended vines. The land is to have a year of complete rest. Whatever the land yields during the Sabbath year shall be food for you—for yourself, your manservant and maidservant, the hired hand or foreigner who stays with you, and for your livestock and the wild animals in your land. All its growth may serve as food.'”Theological SignificanceThe sabbatical year underscores the belief that the land ultimately belongs to God, and humans are merely stewards of His creation. By ceasing agricultural activities every seventh year, the Israelites were reminded of their dependence on God’s provision. This practice was an act of faith, trusting that God would provide enough in the sixth year to sustain them through the seventh (Leviticus 25:20-22).Moreover, the sabbatical year served as a social equalizer. It provided for the poor and the stranger, ensuring that everyone had access to the land’s produce. This reflects the broader biblical theme of justice and care for the marginalized.

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Historical Observance

While the biblical texts provide clear instructions for the sabbatical year, historical adherence to this commandment varied. The prophets, such as Jeremiah and Nehemiah, rebuked the Israelites for neglecting this practice, linking their disobedience to the land’s desolation and the Babylonian exile (2 Chronicles 36:20-21). This suggests that the sabbatical year was not consistently observed, leading to divine judgment.

Contemporary Relevance

In modern times, the principle of allowing the land to rest has found resonance in sustainable subsistence agricultural practices. Crop rotation, fallowing, and organic farming echo the ancient wisdom of the sabbatical year, promoting soil health and ecological balance. For believers, the sabbatical year remains a powerful reminder of God’s sovereignty, the call to stewardship, and the importance of social justice.

Subsistence Farming

The traditional farming method of crop rotation and maintaining the integrity of seeds is often referred to as traditional agriculture. This approach, also known as subsistence farming, emphasizes low environmental impact and reliance on nature for crop and livestock production. It is characterized by practices such as no-till farming, natural fertilization, minimal weeding, crop rotation and permanent ground cover. These methods have been passed down through generations and are integral to sustainable livelihoods.  source

It has been proven, over and over, that when we do things as God commands in His Word/The Bible…things work very well.  Modern, industrialized farming is what is causing all our agricultural problems and all the cruelty to animals. God’s COMMANDMENTS are not grievous!  They are for our protection and our prosperity.  Believe me when I tell you that when you live by God’s Provision, He promises you will have all that you NEED.  I can attest that when GOD provides all that you NEED you experience TRUE PROSPERITY.  YOU WANT FOR NOTHING, YOU ARE RICH.
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THE SEED BELONGS TO THE LORD

In Genesis 1:11, it is stated that God created every living thing and put the seed inside so that every living thing brings forth life after its own kind. This verse emphasizes the divine command for the earth to produce vegetation and fruit-bearing trees, highlighting the importance of reproduction and continuity in creation. The phrase underscores the principle of fixed species, indicating that each plant and tree reproduces within its own category, reflecting God’s design for a self-sustaining ecosystem. Bible Gateway

Here are some Old Testament commands about farming, planting, and sowing:
  • Leviticus 19:19:You are to keep My statutes. You shall not breed together two kinds of your livestock; you shall not sow your field with two kinds of seed, nor wear a garment upon you of two kinds of material mixed together.This command emphasizes the importance of purity and separation in agricultural practices. 

  • Leviticus 26:16:You shall not sow your vineyard with two kinds of seed, or all the produce of the seed which you have sown and the increase of the vineyard will become defiled.” This command highlights the need for purity in agricultural practices. 

  • Proverbs 11:18:A wicked person earns deceptive wages, but the one who sows righteousness reaps a sure reward.” This verse illustrates the spiritual consequences of sowing evil over good rather than good or evil
Heirloom Seeds

Heirloom seeds and heritage seeds are often considered more genetically pure and have a deeper cultural significance.
MONSANTOS SEEDS ARE GENETICALLY MODIFIED AND PATNENTED
Monsanto’s patents cover not just genetically engineered seeds distributed by Monsanto and its agents, but also seeds circulating in the environment that contain Monsanto’s genesSOURCE
Monsanto’s controversial legacy has left an indelible mark on agriculture global health and the environment. The agrochemical giant’s decades-long history includes the production of toxic chemicals like Agent Orange PCBs and DDT while its aggressive patenting of genetically modified seeds has sparked intense debate about food sovereignty and farmer rights.
The company’s strict patents disrupted centuries-old seed-saving practices forcing farmers to buy new seeds annually. By 2015 Monsanto controlled 80% of the U.S. corn market and 90% of soybean seeds preventing farmers from choosing alternative options. Their contracts banned seed cleaning saving or replanting creating complete dependence on patented products.   SOURCE: 10 Devastating Ways Monsanto Has Harmed Our World

SPACER

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A new study from the National Academy of Sciences estimated that we’ve lost 133 billion tonnes of carbon from soil erosion since the agricultural revolution. The UN claims we only have 60 years of harvests left because of our disastrous soil management practices. 24 billion metric tons of topsoil worldwide are lost due to erosion every year. This is equivalent to removing six inches of soil from an area the size of Iceland every single year. And there’s nowhere left to go.

According to James P.S Neel, most of the world’s arable land is already in production. Fertilizer plays a major part in this destruction. By removing livestock from the agriculture process, farms need to use artificial fertilizers to fix nitrogen in the soil. Fertilizer also releases nitrous oxide, which is 300 times more potent than traditional greenhouse gases. Fertilizer is one of the largest consumers of natural gas, with fertilizer companies like Yara and Mosaic using more natural gas than Exxon.

This is what is unsustainable.

So what is the way forward?

Regenerative livestock-based agriculture.

Restoring the climate comes down to soil, and cattle are veritable soil magicians. Why? They’re natural fertilizer machines. Cow poop is the black gold of the soil revolution. Natural livestock grazing and foraging can help fertilize the soil with manure and restore it to its natural health, rejuvenating the soil and enabling it to sequester more carbon. Dennis Hancock estimates that we could sequester 4.5tg of carbon a year back into the soil with better livestock agriculture practicesthat’s equivalent to taking 3.4 billion cars off the road.

According to the UN, we could take 2 million degraded hectares of land around the world and use regenerative agriculture to restore the soil and delay the progression of climate change for about 20 years. By mimicking nature and allowing livestock to roam freely over soil and fertilize it with manure, we can press the reverse button on climate change. All the while, we can provide people with some of the most nutritious food in the world. In 2018, the government of Andhra Pradesh, India, announced they were going to transition 8 million hectares of land from conventional agriculture to “Zero Budget” regenerative agriculture. General Mills has allotted 1 million acres of land for regenerative agriculture practices, and the nonprofit group Regeneration International has 250 global partners.

Regenerative farm White Oak Pastures, for instance, sequestered 3.5 CO2 e2 kg per kg of beef versus emitting 4 CO2 e2 kg per kg for the Beyond Burger.

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The argument that this model is not scalable is scientifically inaccurate.

There is a lot of land on the planet, and a significant portion of it (almost 25 percent of the globe) is not suitable for cultivating crops. However, it’s perfectly suited for livestock-based agriculture. Ruminants (animals with multi-compartmental stomachs and a rumen) are incredible machines that can upcycle human-inedible cellulosethe most prevalent carbohydrate on the planet in the form of grassand turn it into steaks, milk and delicious nutrients. When these herbivores roam freely, you eliminate the need for tillage and fertilizer. Cows replenish nitrogen to the soil naturally.

So the truth is: the vegan diet will not restore the environment. In fact, it will continue the deadly progression of soil erosion and the gradual destruction of the climate.

It’s important we touch on animal cruelty. The last core tenet of veganism is that eating meat is unethical; vegan activists will plaster photos and videos of the animals you eat all over the Internet and terrify you into avoiding animals. I completely and utterly disagree. If eating red meat increases human health, and reduces disease, that should be our focus. There’s nothing like the suffering disease causes.

However, if you’re still worried about animal cruelty, the best thing you can do is become a meat eater, focusing on grass fed, locally raised meat. Where we do agree with Jonathan and many vegan activists is that factory farming is cruel in many ways and there are most certainly better ways. However, even with factory farming, the vegan diet still kills more animals if you actually look at the statistics. The soil-tilling process alone is deadly for many living things. To clear the soil to plant crops, farmers must till it, removing any animals residing on that land. Farmers spray their fields with pesticides to kill off even more insects. Not only do these pesticides decimate insect life, but they’re also very damaging to human health.

In fact, Monsanto just settled a $2 billion lawsuit because their pesticide, RoundUp, the most commonly used pesticide in the world, causes cancer. That is real cruelty. Artificial fertilizer runoff has created a dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico that has killed over 200,000 metric tons of fish. This is unprecedented slaughter on a grand scale, all caused by our plant-based agriculture practices. According to Mike Archer, a Professor at the University of NSW, 25 times more animals die to produce an equal weight of wheat protein and beef protein. On the other hand, a cow can produce ~500 lbs of human-edible, trimmed beef. That would give one person access to 1.36 lbs of meat a day, or food for an entire year. And incredibly, the only input a properly managed process like this requires is sun, rainfall and grass three things that already exist in nature harmoniously.

It’s time to restore our diet and agriculture practices to their natural roots. Only then can we restore the health of humanity and the health of our beautiful planet.

So to conclude, I only eat beef and I’m more vegan than vegans.

I lived in Texas for 30 years and got to know many Cattle Ranchers.  Privately Owned Cattle Ranches are usually run by families.  They treat their cattle like family.  There is no cruelty involved.  AND, when it comes time to take the life of an animal, GOD prescribes the perfect manner in which to do that in order to avoid any unnecessary pain.  A single slice at the neck puts the animal down almost instantly with very little pain.  
I also want to say that I have been around Vegans throughout my life and I have always said that every Vegan I have known is a “SPACE CADET” which is my way of saying they are not all there in the brain department.  As we have seen, amino acids and protein are essential for BRAIN HEALTH.  The only way for a vegan to replace the amino acids and protein they give up by not eating meat is to eat a ton of legumes/beans.  Most people are not that thrilled about eating beans in large amounts everyday.

Legumes are more important for vegans and they sometimes need a little more attention in vegan diets because they are the richest plant sources of protein.  It’s tempting to brush off the whole protein issue and I think many vegans are somewhat inclined to do soSome of the sample menus that float around the internet to show how easy and/or cheap it is to eat a vegan diet are woefully short of protein...Legumes are the best sources of protein for vegans. They are especially rich in the essential amino acid lysine which the Adventist Health Study researchers suggested is important for bone health. Source

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The New World Order wants us to STOP EATING MEAT and DAIRY.  They prefer that we become pure Vegetarians because they have already altered all or almost all VEGETABLES and/or treated with gases and chemicals and products like Apeel. Unless you buy from your local farmer or buy strictly organic produce in the grocery store you don’t know what you are eating.  Even if they are labeled “All Natural” they are not.  

We already have seen that vegetables alone are not enough for our bodies.  WE NEED PROTEING AND AMINO ACIDS.  The NWO response is to “EAT Z BUGS!”

When four crickets provide as much calcium as a large glass of milk, why isn’t everyone eating bugs already?
WIRED / Ento

The world doesn’t have enough food. “We will have to normalise eating insect protein in the next two to three years (this article was posted in 2018)– we cannot keep destroying the developing world to feed our luxury diet, (what the Hell does that mean?)” says Keiran Olivares Whitaker, founder of Entocycle.

The problem: globally, 80 per cent of agricultural land is used for animal farming producing just 20 per cent of the world’s calories, 90 per cent of the world’s fish stocks are now fully or overfished, agriculture emits more greenhouse gases than cars, trucks, trains, and planes combined and yet still 800 million people around the world go hungry. The world’s population is predicted to hit 10 billion by 2050 – how can we cope with feeding the additional two billion people?

CORPORATE, INDUSTRIALIZED, COMMERCIAL FISHING
Nearly 50 million tons of fish are wasted each year because of inefficient industrial fishing practices. Key issues include overfishing, improper handling, overfishing, bycatch, poor storage practices, and market demand fluctuations.Industrialized fishing generates significant seafood waste, characterized as the bycatch or non-targeted species discarded during fishing operations. This waste often consists of dead or dying fish, crustaceans, and other marine organisms.According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), approximately 20 million tons of fish are discarded annually, many of which are valuable species with potential economic profit. The FAO highlights that these practices severely affect marine biodiversity and ecosystem health.Seafood waste from industrialized fishing involves both deliberate discards and unintentional bycatch. Deliberate discards occur when fish are caught below legal size or quota limits. Unintentional bycatch happens when non-target species are caught accidentally. (accidentally, but unavoidable using industrialize methods with their huge, widespread nets and indiscriminate sweeping methods.)The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) also notes that bycatch losses can negatively impact fish stocks and disrupt food chains in marine ecosystems.Several causes contribute to seafood waste, including overfishing, lack of regulations, and inefficient fishing techniques. …habitat degradation further aggravate(s) these issues by altering fish populations and their habitats.Data indicates that bycatch can be as high as 40% in some fisheries. The World Bank states that this waste costs the global economy billions of dollars annually and suggests urgent reforms may be needed to improve fisheries management for sustainability.

This unwanted waste leads to ecological imbalance, loss of biodiversity, and diminished fish populations. Additionally, it poses challenges for communities reliant on sustainable fishing for their livelihoods.

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With four crickets providing as much calcium as a large glass of milk, and one dung beetle containing more iron than a steak (do you really want to eat a bug that lives to collect poop/shit?)  chefs – from Noma, the four-times best restaurant in the world – scientists – including a team at London South Bank University grinding insects for protein barsand a range of startups across the world are trying to remove the yuck factor. Here’s five companies working on insecter gadgets:

Exo, which makes cricket-based protein bars, was launched by co-founders Gabi Lewis and Greg Sewitz in 2013, whilst still at Brown University. They raised £55,000 through an initial Kickstarter campaign and further funds from investors including rapper Nas and lifestyle guru Tim Ferriss. Fat Duck chef Kyle Connaughton created recipes for bars that contain 10g of protein – free of gluten, grain, soy, dairy and refined sugars. In March 2018, Exo was acquired by Aspire Food Group, an Austin-based insect-farming company founded by three graduate students at McGill university.

Entocycle

Entocycle grows black soldier fly larvae which eats organic waste (are you paying attention.  First of all FLIES are most vile. Beelzebub/Satan is the Lord of the Flies. As stated right her flies and larvae EAT WASTE as in SHIT/DUNG/POOP! bearing in mind that you are what you eat…do you really want to eat this? – in its London Bridge production centre. Keiran Olivares Whitaker, a former environmental designer (What the Hell is an environment designer?), had the idea when travelling in central America, watching forests “hacked to death’ by farmers. He moved back to London in 2017 and – initially at shoebox level – began cultivating. Entocycle collects organic food waste from farmers, food processors and wholesalers to feed its brood and is currently selling to aquaculture and poultry – although the company expects its fully automated modular factory to be producing a sustainable source of protein for humans before long.

FlyingSpArk

Fruit flies possibly beat dogs as our species best friend (I am laughing now because it is summer and I have fruit in my house so I am horribly plagued by fruit flies.  I hate them and am desperate to rid myself of these disgusting buggers.)  – (fruit flies) used in genetics research since 1910 and supplying their bodies to six Nobel prize winners. Israeli start-up FlyingSpArk is using its fast breeding properties – fruit flies lay around 500 eggs in their short lives which hatch within 24 hoursto provide high protein, calcium, iron and potassium rich and virtually cholesterol-free meat. Breeding fruit flies, co-founder Eran Gronichand argues, involves very little water, virtually no land and the fly’s life cycle is so short they harvest themselves. Last year, the company was one of ten to join IKEA’s startup accelerator – aiming to launch its first product in IKEA’s restaurants.  Bear in mind this article was written in 2018 so IKEA restaurants have been using fruit fly products for seven years!

Essento

Zurich-based Essento’s insect burgers and meatballs have been on sale in Coop, Switzerland’s second largest supermarket chain, since summer 2017after the country authorised the sale of insects for human food in May, including crickets, grasshoppers and mealworms. Environmentalists Matthias Grawehr and Christian Bärtsch founded the company in 2013 and lobbied for legalisation with the help of Isabelle Chevalley, the Green Liberal National Councillor. The company now has deals with the Bug a Thai restaurant and is developing a new product – grasshopper skewers. When we started people were quite sceptical about eating insects,” explains Grawehr. “Changing the law is changing the yuck factor.

Eat Grub

Eat Grub, founded in 2013 by Neil Whippey and Shami Radia after a charity trip to Malawi introduced Radia to flying ants cooked in chilli and lime. The pair kicked off with a series of pop-up restaurants in London, where neo-Thai chef Seb Holmes served up a seven course tasting menu. The recipes appeared in a co-authored book Eat Grub: The Ultimate Insect Cookbook, followed by the launch of a range of freeze dried, ready- to-cook insects, cricket powder energy bars and roasted grub snacks. In 2016, Eat Grub partnered with farmer and entomologist Howard Bell to launch Entovista, the UK’s first cricket farm.

Want to know more about the future of food?

This week on WIRED, we’re celebrating all things food – from meatless meat to robot farmers. Get stuck in…

This article was originally published by WIRED UK

How long have the people of Thailand been eating bugs?   Centuries

Why Eating Insects May Not Be As Sustainable As It Seems

By Eustacia Huen,

Contributor.  Eustacia Huen is a Hong Kong-based writer who covers food and luxury.

Apr 30, 2017, 06:59pm EDTApr 30, 2017, 06:59pm EDT

Whether you’re an entomophagist or not, you should’ve come across at least an article or two touting the benefits of insects as a sustainable food source. From online articles to government reports, the general consensus seems to be: Edible insects are sustainable and we should consider eating them to save the planet.

 

Afton Halloran

If only it were that simple.

In the following exclusive excerpt from On Eating Insects: Essays, Stories and Recipes (Phaidon), a book from Nordic Food Lab, written by Joshua Evans, Roberto Flore, and Michael Bom Frøst due to release on May 1, you can learn more about the complexities of this issue and find out why eating insects may not be as sustainable as it seems.

EXCLUSIVE EXCERPT: Universalized ‘sustainability’ PROMOTED

The idea that every insect species is universally sustainable is deceptive. Firstly, the means of procurement is not always sustainable.

In some cases, wild-harvesting may lead to overexploitation of insectsa threat feared by the Thai villagers quoted above. Secondly, not enough is known about the environmental impact of insect farming, and it appears to be much more complex than suggested by the ‘solution narrative’. For instance, farmed insects may be fed on a substrate with its own complicated sustainability status – shown by the example of the giant water bug in Thailand, which requires additional resource use for the farming of its amphibian prey.

The same issue applies to more commonly farmed insects, which tend to be fed with cultivated grain that adds to the insects’ environmental footprint, so that scaled-up production may be no more sustainable than conventional protein sources (see Lundy and Parrella 2015). Thirdly, farmed insects for a consumer market require processing for preservation and to meet consumer preference. When this is done on a large scale, common methods include grinding and freeze-drying, which use significant energy.

Overall, the realities of rearing insects on different substrates and on a large scale are yet to be fully understood, and may bring with them hidden or unforeseen environmental costs. The same certainly applies to the environmental costs of processing methods that tend to stay unmentioned in the marketing of insect products.

The arguments outlined above show the complexity regarding the sustainability of edible insectsyet all largely ignore the human dimension of sustainability. An approach such as Chatree Patisol’s may provide a more holistic answer to how edible insects can be sustainable. In his position both as a teacher and as an insect farmer, he gives local under- privileged youth the chance to gain income and education. So far not even adequately measurable in the most complex multi-dimensional life-cycle assessments, these social components may be given less recognition, but are highly relevant to implementing insects’ full democratic potential as sustainable food.

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WE ARE BEING BUGGED!

style=”font-size: 12pt;”>Oh, how the elite hate truthers!!  Especially when we get in the way of their agendas.  The stakeholds/elites/ruling class have always, throughout history striven to control the masses.  Most often their method of choice ends up being FOOD and WATER.  Without these two things humans cannot survive.  Not only that, when you destroy the … Click Here to Read More

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The globalists have been pushing bug eating for years.  The public as a whole is just not buying it.  At least not here in the USA.  We have been enjoying the blessing of God for so long, without even appreciating it.  We have not suffered a great lack of food that would cause large numbers of people to turn to such drastic measures.
The truth is that those nations who have suffered poverty do not believe in the God of the Bible.  THAT is why they lack.  It is not because the prosperous nations have greedily hogged natural resources.  Which is what the WEF and Trilateral Commission and UN want you to believe.  The Christian nations have been blessed by the favor of GOD because they honored his COMMANDMENTS.
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Once the Globalists realized it was not going to be easy to get freedom loving Americans to eat bugs, they started to develop another alternative to meat and dairy products.  FAKE MEAT!!
And I warned people that it was eventually going to be FAKE MEAT made from POOP, but people think I am crazy.  Stay with me, and you will see.
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An undated handout photo from Eat Just shows a GOOD Meat takeout meal in Singapore.
New YorkCNN — 

Cultivated meat, also known as lab-grown meat, has been cleared for sale in the United States.

Upside Foods and Good Meat, two companies that make what they call “cultivated chicken,” said Wednesday that they have gotten approval from the US Department of Agriculture to start producing their cell-based proteins.

Good Meat, which is owned by plant-based egg substitute maker Eat Just, said that production is starting immediately. Cultivated or lab-grown meat is grown in a giant vat, much like what you’d find at a beer brewery.

Wednesday’s move follows a series of previous approvals which have paved the way for sales of cultivated meat in the US.

Last week, Good Meat and Upside said they had received approval for labels for its product from the USDA. In March, Good said it had received a so-called “no questions” letter from the Food and Drug Administration. That letter states that the administration is satisfied that the product is safe to sell in the United States. The FDA issued a similar letter Upside Foods in November.

The nascent cultivated meat sector is being overseen by both the USDA and the FDA.

Good Meat, which has been selling its products in Singapore, advertises its product as “meat without slaughter,” a more humane approach to eating meat

That is a lie!  The process is not really cow or slaughter free because the stem cell is taken from a living cow and to derive stem cell lines involves embryo destruction.  source

Supporters hope that cultured meat will help fight climate change by reducing the need for traditional animal agriculture, which emits greenhouse gases.

An article originally published by The Download shared the results of a new study about the climate impacts of cultured meat and beef cattle. Our takeaway was that we can never be too sure of any ‘solutions’ or ‘silver bullets.’ There are always hidden caveats.

Ironically, the study is also not without its caveats. While eye-catching, the points made by the researchers are largely assumptions. Lab-grown meat isn’t even on sale to the public yet. The future availability of lab-grown meat and the future rate of meat consumption had to be assumed for the purposes of this study. Beyond climate impact, lab-grown meat still has a ways to go in bringing the price down.

Regardless, the report brings up some interesting points. The researchers explore how animal-free meat might be worse from the environment. They say previous studies have clumped together all emissions from cattle, rather than analyzing individual gases. ”

Methane, for example, has a greater impact on warming in the short term, but it remains in the atmosphere for only around a decade, whereas carbon dioxide persists and accumulates for centuries, coauthor professor Raymond Pierrehumbert told the BBC. Emissions from the lab will be almost entirely made up of carbon dioxide.”   How’s that for your daily paradox?

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The company had previously announced that it was partnering with chef and restaurateur José Andrés to bring the item to a Washington, DC restaurant. It is working with his team on a launch but doesn’t have specific information on timing at this point, according to a company spokesperson. As production ramps up, Good Meat may consider partnering with other restaurants or launching in retail, he added.

The regulatory hurdle cleared Wednesday is called a “grant of inspection,” which is issued by the USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service. Applications for such a grant “are approved following a rigorous process, which includes assessing a firm’s food safety system,” an FSIS spokesperson said Wednesday.

“This announcement that we’re now able to produce and sell cultivated meat in the United States is a major moment for our company, the industry and the food system,” Josh Tetrick, co-founder and CEO of Good Meat and Eat Just, said in a statement Wednesday.

Upside founder and CEO Uma Valeti on Wednesday called the approval “a giant step forward towards a more sustainable future,” adding that it will “fundamentally change how meat makes it to our table.”

Upside is planning to introduce its product at Bar Crenn, a San Francisco restaurant, but did not share a launch date yet. Selling at Bar Crenn should help Upside learn more about how chefs and diners feel about the product, a representative said. Eventually, the company plans to work with other restaurants and make its products available in supermarkets.

For now, Upside is holding a contest to allow curious customers to be among the first to try the product in the US.

— CNN’s Katie Hunt contributed to this report.

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Exclusive: We Tasted The World’s First Cultivated Steak, No Cows Required

Aleph Farms, like many of the more than 100 cultivated meat and fish companies founded over the past decade, starts with stem cells grown in a nutrient-broth-filled bioreactor. Each company has its own proprietary method for prodding those cells to differentiate into proteins or fats, which continue to grow until they clump into formations similar to ground meat, at which point they can be harvested and processed into burgers, sausages, or breaded nuggets. Aleph Farms doesn’t stop there. Instead the company adds a few more steps to create a structured steak with the texture and flavor of a filet mignon.

We Tried The World’s First Cultivated Steak, No Cows Required | Time

It would be easier to aim for a ground meat product, says Toubia, but that doesn’t resonate in the same way as a prime piece of steak. “We need to emotionally connect with consumers if we want to drive acceptance. Starting at the higher end is a way to position our product to make it more appealing.” Toubia invokes Tesla as an analogy—aiming for a premium offering by nailing the details. “They didn’t invent the electric vehicle; they were just the first to get it right.”

Getting steak right is one of the most difficult pieces of engineering for cultivated meat companies. Aleph Farms cracked the code by coaxing the meat, fat, and connective tissue cells to grow along a plant-based, nearly microscopic scaffolding that enables those cells to replicate the muscle fibers of conventionally grown meat. The combined tissues are then grown in a second nutrient broth for four weeks, at which point the ‘steak’ is approximately the size of a smartphone and ready to sear on the grill.

The company is now working on a second iteration that uses a 3D bioprinter (using living cells instead of ink) to combine their structured fibers with fat cells to create a thick, marbled steak—the “holy grail,” according to Toubia. They’ve made a few so far, he says, but not enough for tastings outside of the company.

Aleph’s focus on beef instead of chicken, which is easier to cultivate, and steak instead of ground meat puts it behind other alternative protein companies when it comes to the race to market. GOOD Meat, a division of the American food technology company Eat Just, Inc., is already selling its cultivated chicken in Singapore. Israel’s SuperMeat offers invite-only tastings at its stylish bistro-cum-laboratory where diners tuck into crispy chicken burgers and hot dogs against a backdrop of bioreactors busy producing the next batch.

In the next several months the U.S. Department of Agriculture is expected to rule on whether or not (and if so, how) cultivated meats can be sold in the country. Industry watchers say authorization is likely. Once sales are permitted in the U.S., other countries will soon follow, and companies from around the world will start bringing their cultivated meat products to market in what is likely to be the biggest meat revolution since the domestication of cattle.

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Lab-grown salmon introduced by Bay Area seafood company

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BILL GATES DEMANDS: EAT FAKE MEAT! – DOD Funding Research On Deadly Fake Meat RATIONS!

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So far, their explanation of the steps and the ingredients involved has been extremely vague, I decided to take a much more in depth look at the entire process. 

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Cultured meat

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The first cell-cultured hamburger, cooked at a news conference in London, 2013 Cultured chicken in pasta salad, served at a restaurant in Singapore, 2023
Cultured meat, also known as cultivated meat among other names, is a form of cellular agriculture wherein meat is produced by culturing animal cells in vitro;[1][2][3][4][5] thus growing animal flesh, molecularly identical to that of conventional meat (no, not identical to REAL MEAT), outside of a living animal. Cultured meat is produced using tissue engineering techniques pioneered in regenerative medicine.[6] It has been noted for potential in lessening the impact of meat production on the environment[3] and addressing issues around animal welfarefood security and human health.[7][8][9][10][11][12][13]
LIES, LIES, LIES!!!!  But, that is what marketing is all about.  People seem to have come to accept the lies as just part of their NEW REALITY.
Duration: 20 minutes and 18 seconds.Mark Post of the University of Maastricht presents The Meat Revolution, a lecture about cultured meat, 2015

 

Isha Datar of New Harvest on how a “post-animal bio-economy” can be brought about through cultured meat, eggs, and milk, 2017

Jason Matheny popularized the concept in the early 2000s after he co-authored a paper[14] on cultured meat production and created New Harvest, the world’s first non-profit organization dedicated to in vitro meat research.[15] In 2013Mark Postcreated a hamburger  patty made from tissue grown outside of an animal; other cultured meat prototypes have gained media attention since. In 2020, SuperMeat opened a farm-to-fork restaurant in Tel Aviv called The Chicken, serving cultured chicken burgers in exchange for reviews to test consumer reaction rather than money;[16][17] while the “world’s first commercial sale of cell-cultured meat” occurred in December 2020 at Singapore restaurant 1880, where cultured chicken manufactured by United States firm Eat Just was sold.[18][19]

Most efforts focus on common meats such as pork, beef, and chicken; species which constitute the bulk of conventional meat consumption in developed countries.[20] Some companies have pursued various species of fish and other seafood,[21] such as Avant Meats who brought cultured grouper to market in 2021.[22] Other companies such as Orbillion Bio have focused on high-end or unusual meats including elk, lamb, bison, and Wagyu beef.[23]

The production process of cultured meat is constantly evolving, driven by companies and research institutions. And apparently by Israel. [24] The applications for cultured meat h

avе led to ethical,[25] healthenvironmental, cultural, and economic discussions.[26] Data published by The Good Food Institute found that in 2021 through 2023, cultured meat and seafood companies attracted over $2.5 billion in investment worldwide.[27] However, cultured meat is not yet widely available.   Now we know why they have been killing all the livestock.  They knew we were not willing to accept their options, so they are wiping out our choice which is to stay with the natural, healthy, KNOWN source of proteing provided by GOD.

Nomenclature

Besides cultured meat, the terms cultivated meat,[28][29] clean meat,[30][31] in vitro meatcell-based meat,[32] synthetic meat,[33] slaughter-free meat,[34] craft meat,[35][36] healthy meat,[37] and schmeat[38][39] have been used to describe the product. Although it has multiple meanings, artificial meat is occasionally used.[40] The term lab-grown meat has been used in news media,[41] but has been criticized on the basis that as production reaches market-scale, it won’t be grown in laboratories but rather larger-output facilities which Bruce Friedrich compares to “meat breweries”.[31]

Between 2016 and 2019, clean meat gained tractionThe Good Food Institute (GFI) coined the term in 2016,[42] and in late 2018, the institute published research claiming that use of clean better reflected the production process and benefits.[43][44] Ya, because they apparently make it in essentially a “CLEAN ROOM” like they use for electronics, in order to prevent bacteria and other organisms interfering with the process.  By 2018 it had surpassed cultured and in vitro in media mentions and Google searches.[45] Some stakeholders in cultured meat production, seeking to work with conventional meat producers as allies, felt that the term clean meat unnecessarily tarnished the latter, and went on to prefer cell-based meat as a neutral alternative.[46][47]

In September 2019, GFI announced new research which found that the term cultivated meat is sufficiently descriptive and differentiating, possesses a high degree of neutrality, and ranks highly for consumer appeal.[28][48] A September 2021 poll indicated that the majority of industry CEOs have a preference for cultivated meat, with 75 percent of 44 companies preferring it.[49]

History

Initial research

The theoretical possibility of growing meat in an industrial setting has long been of interest. In a 1931 essay published by various periodicals and later included in his work Thoughts and Adventures, British statesman Winston Churchill wrote: “We shall escape the absurdity of growing a whole chicken to eat the breast or wing, by growing these parts separately under a suitable medium.” Hmm, in 1931 he said that, eh? Goes to show you how long this has been in the works.  [50]

In the 1950s, Dutch researcher Willem van Eelen independently came up with the idea for cultured meat. As a prisoner of war during the Second World War, Van Eelen suffered from starvation, leaving him passionate about food production and food security.[51] He attended a university lecture discussing the prospects of preserved meat.[52] The earlier discovery of cell lines provided the basis for the idea.  So, they already knew about (stem cells) cell lines before 1950.  In vitro cultivation of muscle fibers was first performed successfully in 1971 when pathologist Russell Ross cultured guinea pig aorta. However, In 1991, Jon F. Vein secured patent US 6835390 for the production of tissue-engineered meat for human consumption, wherein muscle and fat would be grown in an integrated fashion to create food products.[53]

In 2001, dermatologist Wiete Westerhof along with van Eelen and businessperson Willem van Kooten announced that they had filed for a worldwide patent on a process to produce cultured meat.[54] The process employed a matrix of collagen seeded with muscle cells bathed in a nutritious solution and induced to divide.[55] That same year, NASA began conducting cultured meat experiments, with the intent of allowing astronauts to grow meat instead of transporting it. In partnership with Morris Benjaminson, they cultivated goldfish and turkey.[56] In 2003, Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr exhibited a few centimeters of “steak”, grown from frog stem cells, which they cooked and ate. The goal was to start a conversation surrounding the ethics of cultured meat—”was it ever alive?”, “was it ever killed?”, “is it in any way disrespectful to an animal to throw it away?”[57]

In the early 2000s, American public health student Jason Matheny traveled to India and visited a factory chicken farm. Appalled by the implications of this system, he later teamed up with three scientists involved in NASA’s efforts. In 2004, Matheny founded New Harvest to encourage development by funding research. In 2005, the four published the first peer-reviewed literature on the subject.[58]

In May 2008, PETA offered a $1 million prize to the first company to bring cultured chicken meat to consumers by 2012.[59] The contestant was required to complete two tasks to earn the prize, namely to produce a cultured chicken meat product that was indistinguishable from real chicken and produce the product in large enough quantities to be competitively sold in at least 10 states. The contest was later extended until 4 March 2014. The deadline eventually expired without a winner.[60]

The Dutch government has invested $4 million into experiments regarding cultured meat.[61] The In Vitro Meat Consortium, a group formed by international researchers, held the first international conference hosted by the Norwegian Food Research Institute in April 2008.[62] Time magazine declared cultured meat production to be one of the 50 breakthrough ideas of 2009.[63] In November 2009, scientists from the Netherlands announced they had managed to grow meat using cells from a live pig.[64]

First public trial

The first cultured beef burger patty was created by Mark Post at Maastricht University in 2013.[65] It was made from over 20,000 thin strands of muscle tissue, cost over $325,000 and needed 2 years to produce.[66] The burger was tested on live television in London on 5 August 2013. It was cooked by chef Richard McGeown of Couch’s Great House Restaurant in Polperro, Cornwall, and tasted by critics Hanni Rützler, a food researcher from the Future Food Studio, and Josh Schonwald. Rützler stated, “There is really a bite to it, there is quite some flavour with the browning. I know there is no fat in it so I didn’t really know how juicy it would be, but there is quite some intense taste; it’s close to meat, it’s not that juicy, but the consistency is perfect. This is meat to me… It’s really something to bite on and I think the look is quite similar.” Rützler added that even in a blind trial she would have taken the product for meat rather than a soya copy.[67]

Industry development

The first cultured hamburger: raw, fried, and tasted by Hanni Rützler on 5 August 2013

It’s just a matter of time before this is gonna happen, I’m absolutely convinced of that. In our case, I estimate the time to be about 3 years before we are ready to enter the market on a small scale, about 5 years to enter the market on a larger scale, and if you’d ask me: “When will [cultured meat] be in the supermarket around the corner?” That’ll be closer to 10 than to 5 years, I think.

Peter Verstrate, Mosa Meat (2018)[68]: 1:06:15 

Between 2011 and 2017, many cultured meat startups were launched.[69] Memphis Meats, now known as Upside Foods,[70] launched a video in February 2016, showcasing its cultured beef meatball.[71][72][73] In March 2017, it showcased chicken tenders and duck a l’orange, the first cultured poultry shown to the public.[74][75][76] An Israeli company, SuperMeat, ran a crowdfunding campaign in 2016, for its work on cultured chicken.[77][78][79][80][81] Finless Foods, a San Francisco-based company working on cultured fish, was founded in June 2016. In March 2017 it commenced laboratory operations.[82]

In March 2018, Eat Just (in 2011 founded as Hampton Creek in San Francisco, later known as Just, Inc.) claimed to be able to offer a consumer product from cultured meat by the end of 2018. According to CEO Josh Tetrick the technology was already there. JUST had about 130 employees and a research department of 55 scientists, where cultured meat from poultry, pork and beef was researched. JUST has received investments from Chinese billionaire Li Ka-shingYahoo! co-founder Jerry Yang and according to Tetrick also by Heineken International and others.[83]

Dutch startup Meatable, consisting of Krijn de Nood, Daan Luining, Ruud Out, Roger Pederson, Mark Kotter and Gordana Apic among others, reported in September 2018 that it had succeeded in growing meat using pluripotent stem cells from animal umbilical cords. Although such cells are reportedly difficult to work with, Meatable claimed to be able to direct them to behave to become muscle or fat cells as needed. The major advantage is that this technique bypasses fetal bovine serum, meaning that no animal has to be killed to produce meat.[84] Which means one would assume that up until this point, they were killing animals to create the products.  That month, an estimated 30 cultured meat startups operated across the world.[68] IntegriCulture is a Japan-based company working on their CulNet system.[clarification needed] Competitors included England based Multus Media and Canadian Future Fields.[85]

In August 2019, five American startups announced the formation of the Alliance for Meat, Poultry & Seafood Innovation (AMPS Innovation), a coalition seeking to work with regulators to create a pathway to market for cultured meat and seafood.[86] The founding members include Eat JustMemphis Meats, Finless Foods, BlueNalu, and Fork & Goode.[87] Similarly in December 2021, a group of 13 European and Israeli companies (Aleph Farms, Bluu Biosciences, Cubiq Foods, Future Meat, Gourmey, Higher Steaks, Ivy Farm, MeatableMirai FoodsMosa MeatPeace of MeatSuperMeat, and Vital Meat) established Cellular Agriculture Europe, a Belgium-based association that sought to ‘find common ground and speak with a shared voice for the good of the industry, consumers, and regulators’.[88][89][90]

In October 2019, Aleph Farms collaborated with 3D Bioprinting Solutions to culture meat on the International Space Station. This was done by extruding meat cells onto a scaffold using a 3D printer.[91] In January 2020, Quartz found around 30 cultured meat startups, and that Memphis Meats, Just Inc. and Future Meat Technologies were the most advanced because they were building pilot plants.[92][93] According to New Scientist in May 2020, 60 start-ups were developing cultured meat. Some of these were technology suppliers.[94] Growth media reportedly still cost “hundreds of dollars per litre, but for clean meat production to scale this needs to drop to around $1 a litre.[94] In June 2020, Chinese government officials called for a national strategy to compete in cultured meat.[95]

In December 2019, the Foieture project was launched in Belgium with the goal of developing cultured foie gras (the name is a portmanteau of ‘foie’ and ‘future’) by a consortium of 3 companies (cultured-meat startup Peace of Meat, small meat-seasoning company Solina, and small pâté-producing company Nauta) and 3 non-profit institutes (university KU Leuven, food industry innovation centre Flanders Food, and Bio Base Europe Pilot Plant).[96] Peace of Meat stated in December 2019 that it intended to complete its proof of concept in 2020, to produce its first prototype in 2022, and to go to market in 2023.[96] That month, the Foieture project received a research grant of almost 3.6 million euros from the Innovation and Enterprise Agency of the Flemish Government.[96] In May 2020, Peace of Meat’s Austrian-born cofounder and scientific researcher Eva Sommer stated that the startup was then able to produce 20 grams of cultured fat at a cost of about 300 euros (€15,000/kg); the goal was to reduce the price to 6 euros per kilogram by 2030.[97] Piece of Meat built two laboratories in the Port of Antwerp.[97] In late 2020, MeaTech acquired Peace of Meat for 15 million euros, and announced in May 2021 that it would build a new large-scale pilot plant in Antwerp by 2022.[98]

In November 2020, Indian start-up Clear Meat claimed it had managed to cultivate chicken mince at the cost of only 800–850 Indian rupees (US$10.77–11.44), while a slaughtered processed chicken cost about 1,000 rupees.[99] On 27 April 2022, the European Commission approved the request for the collection of signatures for the European Citizens’ Initiative End The Slaughter Age to shift subsidies from animal husbandry to cellular agriculture.[100]

According to a November 2023 report by Oghma Partners, 46.9% of all funds – over 2.6 billion British pounds – raised for cultivated meat start-ups between 2016 and 2023 went to a top five, comprising Upside Foods (21.5%; formerly Memphis Meats), Believer Meats (formerly Future Meat Technologies), WildtypeAleph Farms, and Mosa Meat.[101]

Market entry

There is a handful [of startups]. It’s quite interesting to see, there are three hubs: one in Silicon Valley, one in the Netherlands and one in Israel. I think that’s because these three places have firstly, a great agricultural university – we’ve got Wageningen; secondly, a great medical university – for us that’s Leiden; and finally we’ve got Delft on the engineering side. Those three combined gives you a firm basis to [develop cultured meat], and that [combination] exists in Israel, the Netherlands and America.

Krijn de Nood, Meatable (2020)[102]

Australia and New Zealand entry

On 7 April 2025, Vow quail became the first cultured meat product to be officially approved for sale in Australia and New Zealand.[103] In mid-June 2025, Vow expected to be serving its cultivated quail in restaurants in Sydney and Melbourne “within weeks”.[104][105]

European Union and Switzerland entry

In the European Unionnovel foods such as cultured meat products have to go through a testing period of about 18 months during which a company must prove to the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) that their product is safe.[106][107] In March 2022, cultured meat producers had reached the level of attempting to gain regulatory approval from European Union supranational institutions coming just before mass goods could be sold to consumers.[3] By February 2023, none had yet submitted a novel food dossier for approval by the EFSA.[107] Legal experts explained this as having to do with the fact that, although the EFSA’s novel food procedure has been well-established since 1997 (unlike in other jurisdictions, that still have or had to develop certain regulatory standards), it is a long and complicated process in which companies can have little input once they have submitted their request, unlike cultured meat startups in the United States (who could easily communicate back and forth with the FDA to clarify any issues), and in the UK, Singapore and Israel (where governments have implemented a ‘single point of contact’ responsible for the overall process).[107]

Aleph Farms was the first start-up to apply for approval of its cultivated beef steaks in Switzerland in July 2023.[108] While not part of the European Union, Switzerland was regarded as an important case study with great interest from legal scholars around the world and expected to have widespread implications for the EU countries surrounding it.[109]

In April 2024, the Dutch start-up Meatable hosted the first legally approved public proof‑of‑concept tasting of cultured meat in the European Union a sausage following ad hoc approval by a national expert committee under a newly introduced Dutch code of practice. The event attracted significant national and international media attention.[110][111][112] Meatable CTO Daan Luining cautioned it would take several years to scale up production to serve all supermarkets, that cultured meat was just an alternative that would gradually become more widely available, giving consumers more choices, and that the traditional meat industry would not be replaced any time soon.[111]

In July 2024, French startup Gourmey was the first company in Europe to apply for regulatory approval at the EFSA, followed by pioneer Mark Post’s Mosa Meat from the Netherlands in January 2025.[113] Just two weeks later, after securing 1.5 million euros in a crowdfunding campaign within 24 minutes, Mosa Meat teamed up with Swiss meat processor Bell Food Group to apply for regulatory approval for its cultivated beef fat in Switzerland as well,[114] and in May 2025 it submitted its application at the Food Standards Agency in the United Kingdom.[115]

Israel entry

In November 2020, SuperMeat opened a test restaurant in Ness Ziona, Israel, right next to its pilot plant; journalists, experts and a small number of consumers could book an appointment to taste the novel food there, while looking through a glass window into the production facility on the other side. The restaurant was not yet fully open to the public, because as of June 2021 SuperMeat still needed to wait for regulatory approval to start mass production for public consumption, and because the COVID-19 pandemic restricted restaurant operations.[116][117] By February 2023, Israeli authorities had established a regulatory structure similar to that of Singapore, and shown a general willingness to work towards approval (as well as financing research for cultivated food innovation), but were still in the process of developing safety regulations in consultations with researchers and other experts.[107] For example, the Israeli Health Ministry and UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) co-organised a convention of cultivated food safety regulation experts in September 2022.[107]

In January 2024, the Ministry of Health in Israel granted regulatory approval for cultured beef to Aleph Farms.[118][119]

Singapore entry

On 2 December 2020, the Singapore Food Agency approved the “chicken bites” produced by Eat Just for commercial sale. It marked the first time that a cultured meat product passed the safety review (which took 2 years) of a food regulator, and was widely regarded as a milestone for the industry. The chicken bits were scheduled for introduction in Singaporean restaurants.[120] Restaurant “1880” became the first to serve cultured meat to customers on Saturday 19 December 2020.[121][122]

In January 2023, the SFA also granted regulatory approval for the production of cultured meat with serum-free media to Eat Just subsidiary GOOD Meat, which had introduced its cultivated chicken product in several more Singaporean restaurants as well as hawker centres and food delivery services since 2020, and was constructing the bioreactors for its new facility in Singapore.[123] This world-first approval was said to be a milestone in making cultivated meat production more scalable and efficient.[123] In April 2024, Australian start-up Vow obtained Singaporean approval for its cultured quail;[112] while Dutch start-up Meatable would be introducing its cultivated pork sausages in several restaurants in Singapore later in 2024.[112]

United States entry

In November 2022, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) completed the pre-market consultation of Upside Foods (formerly Memphis Meats), concluding that its products were safe to eat, a first for cultivated meat companies in the United States.[124] Approval from the final agency, the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) was received by Upside Foods and Good Meat, both for cultivated chicken, in June 2023.[125][126] On 28 May 2025, Wildtype obtained regulatory approval from the FDA to sell its cultivated coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch) product on the U.S. market.[127] With that, Wildtype became the first start-up to be permitted to sell cultivated seafood in the United States, and a few days later, it was on the menu at the Kann restaurant of Gregory Gourdet in Portland, Oregon.[127]

United Kingdom entry

On 6 February 2025, it was announced that British pet food company THE PACK (acquired by Prefera Petfood in May 2025[128]) would release the first commercially available product for pets containing cultivated chicken made by Meatly the following day.[129]

Companies working on cultured meat

Process


A five-step diagram of cultured meat’s production process

Cell lines

Cellular agriculture requires cell lines, generally stem cells. Stem cells are undifferentiated cells which have the potential to become many or all of the required kinds of specialized cell types. Totipotent stem cells have the capacity to differentiate into all the different cell types found within the body. Pluripotent stem cells can mature into all cell types save those in the placenta, and multipotent stem cells can differentiate into several specialized cell types within one lineage. Unipotent stem cells can differentiate into one specific cell fate.[130]


Stem cells can differentiate into a range of specialized cells.

While pluripotent stem cells would be an ideal source, the most prominent example of this subcategory is embryonic stem cells which—due to ethical issues—are controversial for use in research. As a result, scientists have developed induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs)—essentially multipotent blood and skin cells that have been regressed to a pluripotent state enabling them to differentiate into a greater range of cells.[131] The alternative is using multipotent adult stem cells that give rise to muscle cell lineages or unipotent progenitors which differentiate into muscle cells.[130]

Favourable characteristics of stem cells include immortality, proliferative ability, unreliance on adherence, serum independence and easy differentiation into tissue. The natural presence of such characteristics are likely to differ across cell species and origin. As such, in vitro cultivation must be adjusted to fill the exact needs of a specific cell line. The immortality issue is that cells have a limit on the number of times they can divide that is dictated by their telomere capsupplementary nucleotide bases added to the end of their chromosomes. With each division, the telomere cap progressively shortens until nothing remains, at which time the cells cease to divide. Induced pluripotency can lengthen telomere cap such that the cells divide indefinitely.[131]

Cell lines can be collected from a primary source, i.e., through a biopsy on an animal under local anesthesia. They could also be established from secondary sources such as cryopreserved cultures (cultures frozen after previous research).[132]

Growth medium

MYOBLASTS

Myoblasts are one precursor to muscle cells. Their fibers here are shown in yellow and their nuclei in blue.   PICTURED ON THE LEFT

Once cell lines are established, they are immersed in a culture medium to induce them to proliferate. Culture media are typically formulated from basal media that provide cells with necessary carbohydrates, fats, proteins and salts. Once a cell consumes a sufficient amount, it divides and the population increases exponentially. Culture media can be supplemented with additives—for instance sera—that supply additional growth factors. Growth factors can be secreted proteins or steroids that are crucial in regulating cellular processes.[2]

Once differentiation begins, muscle fibres begin to contract and generate lactic acid. Cells’ ability to absorb nutrients and proliferate in part depends on the pH of their environment. As lactic acid accumulates within the medium, the environment will become progressively more acidic and falls below the optimal pH. As a result, culture media must be frequently refreshed. This helps refresh the concentration of nutrients from the basal media.[24]

Scaffolds

In the case of structured meat products—products that are characterized by their overall configuration as well as cell typecells must be seeded to scaffolds. Scaffolds are essentially molds meant to reflect and encourage the cells to organize into a larger structure. When cells develop in vivo, they are influenced by their interactions with the extracellular matrix (ECM). The ECM is the 3-dimensional mesh of glycoproteinscollagen and enzymes responsible for transmitting mechanical and biochemical cues to the cell. Scaffolds need to simulate the characteristics of the ECM.[2]

 Porosity

Pores are minute openings on the surface of the scaffold. They can be created on the surface of the biomaterial in order to release cellular components that could interfere with tissue development. They also help diffuse gas and nutrients to the innermost layers of adherent cells, preventing a “necrotic center” from forming. A necrotic center is a phenomenon in which cells that are not in direct contact with the culture medium die from a lack of nutrients.[133]

Muscle tissue is developed from the growth medium. The scaffold organizes in a three-dimensional structure for the end product.

Vascularization

Vascular tissue found in plants contains the organs responsible for internally transporting fluids. It forms natural topographies that provide a low cost way to promote cell alignment by replicating the natural physiological state of myoblasts. It may also help with gas and nutrient exchange.[133]

Biochemical properties

A scaffold’s biochemical properties should be similar to those of the ECM. It must facilitate cell adhesion through textural qualities or chemical bonding. Additionally, it must produce the chemical cues that encourage cell differentiation. Alternatively, the material should be able to blend with other substances which have these functional qualities.[133]

Crystallinity

The degree of a material’s crystallinity determines qualities such as rigidity. High crystallinity can be attributed to hydrogen bonding which in turn increases thermal stability, tensile strength (important for maintaining the scaffold’s shape), water retention (important for hydrating the cells) and Young’s modulus.[133]

Degradation

Certain materials degrade into compounds that are beneficial to cells, although this degradation can also be irrelevant or detrimental. Degradation allows easy removal of the scaffold from the finished product leaving only animal tissue—thereby increasing its resemblance to in vivo meat. This degradation can be induced by exposure to certain enzymes which do not impact the muscle tissue.[133]

Edibility

If scaffolds are unable to be removed from the animal tissue, they must be edible to ensure consumer safety. It would be beneficial if they were to be made out of nutritious ingredients.[133] Since 2010, academic research groups and companies have been working to identify raw materials that have the characteristics of suitable scaffolds.[133][134][135][136][137][138]

Cellulose

Cellulose is the most abundant polymer in nature and provides the exoskeletons of plant leaves. Due to its abundance, it can be obtained at a relatively low cost. It is also versatile and biocompatible. Through a process called “decellularization”, it is coated in a surfactant that creates pores. These pores release the plant’s cellular components, and it becomes decellularized plant tissue. This material has been extensively studied by the Pelling and Gaudette Groups at University of Ottawa and Worcester Polytechnic Institute, respectively. Through cross-linking (forming covalent bonds between individual polymer chains to hold them together) the plant tissue’s mechanical properties can be changed so that it more closely resembles muscle tissue. This can also be done by blending plant tissue with other materials. On the other hand, decellularized plant tissue typically lacks mammalian biochemical cues, so it needs to be coated with compensatory functional proteins. C2C12 growth was not shown to change significantly between the bare scaffold and the same scaffold with a coating of collagen or gelatin proteins; however, seeding efficiency (rate at which cells attach to the scaffold) improved.[133][134]

An advantage of decellularized plant tissue is the natural topography afforded by the leaf vasculature. This helps replicate the natural physiological state of the myoblasts which promotes cell alignment. The other ways of doing this are usually quite a bit more expensive including 3D printing, soft lithography and photolithography. Vascularization can also help overcome the 100–200 nm diffusion limit of culture medium into cells that usually produce necrotic centres in muscle conglomerates. Another way to do this is by having a porous scaffold which supports angiogenesis (the development of new blood vessels). While this has been shown to work for apple Hypanthium, not all plants are nearly as porous. The alternative to plant cellulose is bacterial cellulose which is typically more pure than plant cellulose as it is free from contaminants such as lignin and hemicellulose. Bacterial cellulose has more hydrogen bonding between its polymer strands and so it has greater crystallinity. It also has smaller microfibrils that allow it to retain more moisture and have smaller pores. The substance can be produced using waste carbohydrates (which may allow it to be produced less expensively) and it adds juiciness and chewiness to emulsified meat (which would mean that even if it can’t be taken out of the final product, it will contribute to the texture profile).[133][134]

Decellularized plants that have been studied as possible scaffold materials include spinachbambooalgaeapplecelery, and Aloe vera.[139][140]

Chitin

Chitin is nature’s second most abundant polymer. It is found in the exoskeletons of arthropods and fungi. As cellular agriculture is attempting to end reliance on animals, chitin derived from fungi is of greater interest. It has mostly been studied by Pelling Group. Chitosan is derived from chitin in a process known as alkaline deacetylation (substituting out certain amino acid groups). The degree of this process determines the physical and chemical properties of the chitosan. Chitosan has antibacterial properties; in particular, it has bactericidal effects on planktonic bacteria and biofilms and a bacteria static effects on gram negative bacteria such as E. coli. This is important as it neutralizes potentially harmful compounds without using antibiotics, which many consumers avoid. Chitosan’s resemblance to glycosaminoglycans and internal interactions between glycoproteins and proteoglycans make it highly biocompatible. It can easily blend with other polymers in order to select for more bioactive factors. One potential disadvantage of chitosan is that it degrades in the presence of lysozymes (naturally occurring enzymes). But, this can be resisted using deacetylation. This is not entirely negative, as the byproducts produced through degradation have anti-inflammatory and anti-bacterial properties. It is important to match the level that cells rely on the matrix for structure with degradation.[133]

Collagen

Collagen is a family of proteins that makes up the primary structure of human connective tissue. It is typically derived from bovine, porcine and murine sources. Cellular agriculture overcomes this dependency through the use of transgenic organisms that are capable of producing the amino acid repeats that make up the collagen. Collagen naturally exists as collagen type I. It has been produced as porous hydrogels, composites and substrates with topographical cues and biochemical properties. Synthetic kinds of collagen have been produced through recombinant protein production—collagen type II and III, tropoelastin and fibronectin. One challenge with these proteins is that they can not be modified post translation. However, an alternative fibrillar protein has been isolated in microbes that lack collagen’s biochemical cues, but has its kind of gene customizability. One focus of recombinant collagen production is yield optimization—how it can be produced most effectively. Plants, in particular, tobacco look like the best option, however, bacteria and yeast are also viable alternatives.[133]

Textured soy protein is a soy flour product often used in plant-based meat that supports the growth of bovine cells. Its spongy texture enables efficient cell seeding and its porosity encourages oxygen transfer. Additionally, it degrades during cell differentiation into compounds that are beneficial to certain cells.[135]

Mycelium

Mycelium are the roots of mushrooms. Altast Foods Co. is using solid state fermentation to grow mushroom tissue on mycelium scaffolds. They harvest this tissue and use it to create bacon analogs.[136]

Nanomaterials

Nanomaterials exhibit unique properties at the nanoscale. London-based Biomimetic Solutions is leveraging nanomaterials in order to create scaffolds.[135] Cass Materials in Perth, Australia, is using a dietary fibre called Nata de Coco (derived from coconuts) to create nanocellulose sponges for their BNC scaffold. Nata de Coco is biocompatible, has high porosity, facilitates cell adhesion and is biodegradable.[137]

Spinning

Immersion Jet Spinning is a method of creating scaffolds by spinning polymers into fibres. It was developed by the Parker Group at Harvard. Their platform uses centrifugal force to extrude a polymer solution through an opening in a rotating reservoir. During extrusion, the solution forms a jet that elongates and aligns as it crosses the air gap. The jet is directed into a vortex-controlled precipitation bath that chemically cross links or precipitates polymer nanofibers. Adjusting air gap, rotation and the solution changes the diameter of the resulting fibres. This method can spin scaffolds out of PPTA, nylon, DNA and nanofiber sheets. A nanofibrous scaffold made from alginate and gelatin was able to support the growth of C2C12 cells. Rabbit and bovine aortic smooth muscle myoblasts were able to adhere to the gelatin fibres.[141] They formed aggregates on shorter fibres, and aligned tissue on the longer ones.[138] Matrix Meats is using electrospinning—a process that uses electric force to turn charged polymers into fibres for scaffolds. Their scaffolds allowed meat marbling, are compatible with multiple cell lines, and are scalable.[142]

Additive manufacturing

Bioprinting that assembles cell fibers could be used to produce a variety of steak-like cultured meat.[143]

Another proposed way of structuring muscle tissue is additive manufacturing. Such a technique was perfected for industrial applications in manufacturing objects made out of plastic, metal, glass and other synthetic materials. The most common variation of the process involves incrementally depositing a filament in layers onto a bed until the object is completed. This method will most likely lend itself best to the application of cultured meat as opposed to other types such as binder jetting, material jetting or stereolithography that require a specific kind of resin or powder.[citation needed]

A filament of muscle cells can be printed into a structure meant to resemble a finished meat product which can then be further processed for cell maturation. This technique has been demonstrated in a collaboration between 3D bioprinting solutions and Aleph Farms that used additive manufacturing to structure turkey cells on the International Space Station.[144] 3D bioprinting has been used to produce steak-like cultured meat, composed of three types of bovine cell fibers and with a structure of assembled of cell fibers that is similar to original meat.[143][145]

Bioreactors

A bioreactor beside a glass vessel 

A potential bioreactor configuration for cultured meat

Scaffolds are placed inside bioreactors so that cell growth and specialization can occur. Bioreactors are large machines similar to brewery tanks which expose the cells to a large variety of environmental factors that are necessary to promote either proliferation or differentiation. The temperature of the bioreactor must replicate in vivo conditions. In the case of mammalian cells, this requires heating to 37 °C (99 °F). Alternatively, insect cells can be grown at room temperature. Most bioreactors are maintained at 5% carbon dioxide.[2][146] Cells can be cultivated in either continuous or fed-batch systems. The former entails inoculating and harvesting cells in a constant process so that there are always cells in the bioreactor. Fed-batch systems mean inoculating the cells, culturing them and harvesting them in a single period.[2]

Stirred tank bioreactors are the most widely used configuration. An impeller increases the flow, thereby homogenizing the culture media and a diffuser facilitates the exchange of oxygen into the media. This system is generally used for suspended cultures but can be used for cells that require attachment to another surface if microcarriers are included. Fixed bed bioreactors are commonly used for adherent cultures. They feature strips of fibres that are packed together to form a bed to which cells can attach. Aerated culture media is circulated through the bed. In airlift bioreactors, the culture media is aerated into a gaseous form using air bubbles which are then scattered and dispersed amongst the cells. Perfusion bioreactors are common configurations for continuous cultivation. They continuously drain media saturated with lactic acid that is void of nutrients and fill it with replenished media.[147]

Challenges

Growth factors

The culture media is an essential component of in vitro cultivation. It is responsible for providing the macromolecules, nutrients and growth factors necessary for cell proliferation. Sourcing growth factors is one of the most challenging tasks of cellular agriculture. Traditionally, it involves the use of fetal bovine serum (FBS) which is a blood product extracted from fetal cows. Besides the argument that its production is unethical, it also violates the notion that the cultured meat is produced independent of the use of animals. It is also the most costly constituent of cultured meat, priced at around $1000 per litre. Furthermore, chemical composition varies greatly depending on the animal, so it cannot be uniformly quantified chemically.[148] FBS is employed because it conveniently mimics the process of muscle development in vivo. The growth factors needed for tissue development are predominantly provided through an animal’s bloodstream, and no other known fluid can single-handedly deliver all these components.[2]

The current alternative is to generate each growth factor individually using recombinant protein production. In this process, the genes coding for the specific factor are integrated into bacteria which are then fermented. Due to the added complexity of this process, it is particularly expensive.[2] Future Fields, a Canadian company focused on overcoming the economic and environmental costs of traditional growth media, is developing serum-free growth factors from fruit flies.[149]

The ideal medium would be chemically quantifiable and accessible to ensure simplicity in production, cheap and not dependent on animals.[55] It will most likely be derived from plants; and while this may reduce the possibility of transmitting infectious agents, it may induce allergic reactions in some consumers.[150] Such culture sera may also require modifications specific to the cell line to which they are applied. Companies currently invested in developing effective plant based culture include Multus Media and Biftek.[151][152]

The Good Food Institute (GFI) put out a report in 2019 in support of the concept that cell-based meat could be produced at the same cost as ground beef and in 2021 they commissioned a report from CE Delft on the Techno-Economic Analysis of cultivated meat.[153] Another proposed approach is to subject the cell lines to a magnetic field, which can stimulate the release of molecules that have regenerative, metabolic, anti-inflammatory and immunity-boosting properties, acting as an alternative to serum.[154]

Surface area

A common challenge to bioreactors and scaffolds is developing system configurations that enable all cells to gain exposure to culture media while simultaneously optimizing spatial requirements. In the cell proliferation phase, prior to the introduction of the scaffold, many cell types need to be attached to a surface to support growth. As such, cells must be grown in confluent monolayers only one cell thick which necessitates a lot of surface area. This poses practical challenges on large scales. As such, systems may incorporate microcarriers—small spherical beads of glass or other compatible material that are suspended in the culture medium. Cells adhere to these microcarriers as they would to the sides of the bioreactor, which increases the amount of surface area.[155]

In the cell differentiation phase, the cells may be seeded to a scaffold and so do not require the use of microcarriers. However, in these instances, the density of the cells on the scaffold means that not all cells have an interface with culture media, leading to cell death and necrotic centers within the meat. When muscle is cultivated in vivo, this issue is circumvented as the extracellular matrix delivers nutrients into the muscle through blood vessels. As such, many emerging scaffolds aim to replicate such networks.[155]

Similarly, scaffolds must simulate many of the other characteristics of the extracellular matrix, most notably porosity, crystallinity, degradation, biocompatibility and functionality. Few materials that emulate all these characteristics have been identified, leading to the possibility of blending different materials with complementary properties.[133]

Research support

Cellular agriculture research does not have a significant basis of academic interest or funding streams.[26] Consequently, the majority of research has been undertaken and funded by independent institutions. This is incrementally changing as not for profits drive support and interest. Notably, New Harvest has a fellowship program to support graduate students and groups at various academic institutions.[156] Additionally, a growing number of governments are funding research in cellular agriculture. In August 2020, the Grant Management Services of the European Commission awarded a €2.5 million grant to ORF Genetics.[157] That same month, the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry granted IntegriCulture $2.2 million through their New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization.[158]

The European Union’s Horizon 2020 R&D funding framework awarded a €2.7 million grant to a consortium led by BioTech Foods.[159] In 2021, the Spanish government granted €3.7 million for Biotech Foods to investigate the potential health benefits of cellular agriculture.[160] The National Science Foundation awarded a $3.55 million grant to a team of researchers at UC Davis for open-access cultured meat research.[161] Non-profits also drive support and interest in the field. Notably, New Harvest has a fellowship program to support the research of specific graduate students and groups at various academic institutions and the Good Food Institute funds open-access research through its Research Grant Program.[162]

Consumer acceptance

Consumer acceptance of the product is critical.[163][164] A study looking at acceptance of cultured meat in China, India, and the US “found high levels of acceptance of clean meat in the three most populous countries worldwide.”[165] Several potential factors of consumer acceptance of cultured meat have been identified. Healthiness, safety, nutritional characteristics, sustainability, taste, and lower price, are all contributing factors.[166] One study found that the use of highly technical language to explain cultured meat led to significantly more negative public attitude towards the concept.[167] One study suggested that describing cultured meat in a way that emphasizes the final product rather than the production method was an effective way to improve acceptance.[168]

The use of standardized descriptions would improve future research about consumer acceptance of cultured meat. Current studies have often reported drastically different rates of acceptance, despite similar survey populations.[169] Lou Cooperhouse, CEO of BlueNalu, shared on the Red to Green Podcast that “cell-based” and “cell-cultured” were suitable terms to differentiate it from conventional meat whilst being clear about the process by which it was made.[170] There also exists a challenge in how to use these descriptions in labelling. For example, in the United States there is no overarching federal legislation that regulates how cultured meat should be labeled for the consumer. While traditional meat producers are attempting to prevent cultured meat companies from using the term “meat,” cultured meat producers argue that the word is necessary for consumer acceptance.[171]

Global market acceptance has not been assessed. Studies are attempting to determine the current levels of consumer acceptance and identify methods to improve this value.[172] Clear answers are not available, although one recent study reported that consumers were willing to pay a premium for cultured meat.[166][167][168][173][174][175][176] Low percentages of older adult populations have been reported to show acceptance for cultured meat. Green eating behavior, educational status, and food business, were cited as most important factors for this population.[175] There is also a lack of studies relating the methods of producing cultured meat with its taste for the consuming public.[citation needed]

Regulations

Regulatory matters must also be sorted out. Prior to being available for sale, the European Union, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and Canada require approved novel food applications. Additionally, the European Union requires that cultured animal products and production must prove safety, by an approved company application, as of 1 January 2018.[177]

Singapore

In 2020, Singapore became the first country in the world to approve cultured meat for sale. The Singapore Food Agency has published guidance on its requirements for the safety assessment of novel foods, including specific requirements on the information to be submitted for approval of cultivated meat products.[178]

Italy

In March 2023, Italy’s Meloni government approved a draft bill banning the production and commercialization of cultivated meat for human and animal consumption;[179][180][181] this move, which the government said was intended to protect food heritage,[182] was criticized, including by scientists, for being at odds with global trends of openness and legalization,[183] as misguided,[184] and for possibly worsening climate change in Italy.[185]

By October 2023, it was reported the Italian government had retired the draft bill,[186][187][188] and withdrew the Technical Regulation Information System notification, a procedure aimed at preventing the creation of barriers within the European Union’s internal market, for the bill.[189] Francesco Lollobrigida, Italy’s minister of agriculture, said that the withdrawal of the proposed anti-cultured meat bill Italy submitted to the European Union “is not a step back”, which many speculated was because the government wanted to avoid a likely rejection by the European Commission. He added that the bill was not going to be retired and would move forward.[190] Italy became the first country to ban cultured meat in November 2023, when the government approved the bill.[191][192]

US

In September 2020, the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) have agreed to jointly regulate cultured meat. Under the agreement, the FDA oversees cell collection, cell banks, and cell growth and differentiation, while the USDA oversees the production and labeling of food products derived from the cells that are meant for human consumption.[193]

Several U.S. states, such as MissouriSouth CarolinaTexas, and Washington, have passed legislation limiting the use of the term meat on cultured meat packaging.[194][171]

Full bans on cultured meat have been enacted in Florida and Alabama: in Florida the law makes it a criminal offense to manufacture and sell,[195] and in Alabama cultured meat has been illegal to manufacture, sell, or distribute since October 2024.[196] The governments of Arizona, Kentucky, Tennessee, and West Virginia are considering similar laws.[197]

In August 2024, Upside Foods sued Florida in an attempt to strike down their law.[198]

Differences from conventional meat

Health

Large-scale production of cultured meat may or may not require artificial growth hormones to be added to the culture for meat production.[199][200] As cultured meat is grown in a sterile environment, there is no need for antibiotics.[201] Today, the widespread use of antibiotics in conventional agriculture is the main driver of antibiotic resistance in humans.[202] According to the World Health Organization, antimicrobial resistance represents “an increasingly serious threat to global public health that requires action across all government sectors and society”[203] – predicting up to 10 million deaths annually by 2050.[204] Cultured meat could provide an effective solution to help mitigate this major risk to human health.[205]

Researchers have suggested that omega-3 fatty acids could be added to cultured meat as a health bonus.[61] In a similar way, the omega-3 fatty acid content of conventional meat can be increased by altering what the animals are fed.[206] Research is currently underway in Spain to develop cultivated meat with healthier fats, which could reduce cholesterol and the risk of colon cancer typically associated with red meat consumption.[207] An issue of Time magazine suggested that the cell-cultured process may also decrease exposure of the meat to bacteria and disease.[62]

Due to the strictly controlled and predictable environment, cultured meat production has been compared to vertical farming. Some of its proponents have predicted that it will have similar benefits in terms of reducing exposure to dangerous chemicals like pesticides and fungicides, severe injuries, and wildlife.[208] There is also a lack of research on the comparison on the health effects of production cultured meat with the industrial meat or the biologic organic meat ways of production.[citation needed]

Artificiality

Although cultured meat consists of animal muscle cells, fat and support cells, as well as blood vessels,[209] that are the same as in traditional meat, some consumers may find the high-tech production process unacceptable. Cultured meat has been described as fake or “Frankenmeat”.[210] On the other hand, cultured meat can be produced without the artificial hormones, antibiotics, steroids, medicine, and GMOs commonly used in factory farmed meat and seafood, though not used on organic biologic production. If a cultured meat product is different in appearancetastesmelltexture, or other factors, it may not be commercially competitive with conventionally produced meat. The lack of bone and cardiovascular system is a disadvantage for dishes where these parts make appreciable culinary contributions. The lack of bones and/or blood may make many traditional meat preparations, such as buffalo wings, more palatable to some people. Furthermore, blood and bones could potentially be cultured in the future.[211][212][213]

Environment

Animal production for food is a major cause of air/water pollution and carbon emissions.[214] Significant questions have been raised about whether the traditional industry can meet the rapidly increasing demands for meat.[215] Cultured meat may provide an environmentally conscious alternative to traditional meat production.[216] The environmental impacts of cultured meat are expected to be significantly lower than from animal husbandry.[217] For every hectare that is used for vertical farming and/or cultured meat manufacturing, anywhere between 10 and 20 hectares of land may be returned to its natural state.[218] Vertical farms (in addition to cultured meat facilities) could exploit methane digesters to generate a portion of its electrical needs. Methane digesters could be built on site to transform the organic waste generated at the facility into biogas which is generally composed of 65% methane. This biogas could be burned to generate electricity for the greenhouse or a series of bioreactors.[219]

One study reported that cultured meat was “potentially … much more efficient and environmentally-friendly”. It generated only 4% of greenhouse gas emissions, reduced the energy needs of meat production by up to 45%, and required only 2% of the land that the global meat/livestock industry does.[220][221] In Tuomisto’s life cycle analysis claimed that producing 1,000 kg of meat conventionally requires “26–33 GJ energy, 367–521 m3 water, 190–230 m2 land, and emits 1900–2240 kg CO2-eq GHG emissions”. On the other hand, producing the same quantity of meat in vitro has “7–45% lower energy use… 78–96% lower GHG emissions, 99% lower land use, and 82–96% lower water use”.[222]

The latest study by independent research firm CE Delft shows that—compared with conventional beef—cultured meat may cause up to 92% less greenhouse gas emissions if renewable energy is used in the production process, 93% less pollution, up to 95% less land use and 78% less water.[223] There are many environmental concerns about intensive poultry farming that too can be reduced by cultivating their meat instead of farming animals. These concerns include microorganism and pharmaceutical-containing manure entering the water and soil, emission of greenhouse gasses such as nitrous oxide and methane, and the volatilization of manure particles.[224]

Skeptic Margaret Mellon of the Union of Concerned Scientists speculates that the energy and fossil fuel requirements of large-scale cultured meat production may be more environmentally destructive than producing food off the land.[59] S. L. Davis speculated that both vertical farming in urban areas and the activity of cultured meat facilities may cause relatively little harm to the wildlife that live around the facilities.[225] Dickson Despommier speculated that natural resources may be spared from depletion due to vertical farming and cultured meat.[226] One study reported that conventional farming kills ten wild animals per hectare each year.[225]

Role of genetic modification

Techniques of genetic engineering, such as insertion, deletion, silencing, activation, or mutation of a gene, are not required to produce cultured meat. Cultured meat production allows the biological processes that normally occur within an animal to occur without the animal. Since cultured meat is grown in a controlled, artificial environment, some have commented that cultured meat more closely resembles hydroponic vegetables, rather than genetically modified vegetables.[227]

More research is underway on cultured meat, and although cultured meat does not require genetic engineering, researchers may employ such techniques to improve quality and sustainability. Fortifying cultured meat with nutrients such as beneficial fatty acids is one improvement that can be facilitated through genetic modification. The same improvement can be made without genetic modification, by manipulating the conditions of the culture medium.[228] Genetic modification may be able to enhance muscle cell proliferation. The introduction of myogenic regulatory factors, growth factors, or other gene products into muscle cells may increase production over that of conventional meat.[228]

To avoid the use of any animal products, the use of photosynthetic algae and cyanobacteria has been proposed to produce the main ingredients for the culture media, as opposed to fetal bovine or horse serum.[229] Some researchers propose that the ability of algae and cyanobacteria to produce ingredients for culture media can be improved with certain technologies, most likely not excluding genetic engineering.[230]

Ethical

Australian bioethicist Julian Savulescu said, “Artificial meat stops cruelty to animals, is better for the environment, could be safer and more efficient, and even healthier. We have a moral obligation to support this kind of research. It gets the ethical two thumbs up.”[231] Animal welfare groups are generally in favor of cultured meat, because the culture process does not include a nervous system and therefore does not involve pain or infringement of rights.[59][232][233] Reactions of vegetarians to cultured meat vary.[234] Some feel the cultured meat presented to the public in August 2013 was not vegetarian because fetal bovine serum was used in the growth medium.[235] However, since then, cultured meat has been grown with a medium that does not involve bovine serum.[236] Philosopher Carlo Alvaro argues that the question of the morality of eating in vitro meat has been discussed only in terms of convenience. Alvaro proposes a virtue-oriented approach, suggesting that the determination to produce cultured meat stems from unvirtuous motives, i.e., “lack of temperance and misunderstanding of the role of food in human flourishing.”[237]

Some have proposed independent inquiries into the standards, laws, and regulations for cultured meat.[238] Just as with many other foods, cultured meat needs technically sophisticated production methods that may be difficult for some communities, meaning they would lack self-sufficiency and be dependent on global food corporations.[239] Some projects are focusing on making cellular agriculture accessible to all. The Shojinmeat Project, for instance, has a bottom-up approach, teaching participants to cultivate DIY cultured meat at home.[240]

Establishing a similar parallel with cultured meat, some environmental activists claim that adopting a vegetarian diet may be a way of focusing on personal actions and righteous gestures rather than systemic change. Environmentalist Dave Riley states that “being meatless and guiltless seems seductively simple while environmental destruction rages around us”, and writes that Mollison “insists that vegetarianism drives animals from the edible landscape so that their contribution to the food chain is lost”.[241]

Religious considerations

Jewish rabbinical authorities disagree whether cultured meat is kosher, meaning acceptable under Jewish law and practice. One factor is the nature of the animal from which the cells are sourced, whether it is a kosher or non-kosher species and whether, if the cells were taken from a dead animal, slaughter in accordance with religious practice had taken place prior to the extraction of cells. Most authorities agree that if the original cells were taken from a religiously slaughtered animal then the meat cultured from it will be kosher.[242] Depending on the nature of the cells, it may be determined to be kosher even when taken from a live animal, and some have argued that it would be kosher even if coming from non-kosher animals such as pigs.[243] In 2023 the issue of lab meat being a non-meat product or “pareve” has come up for debate.[244] In 2023 the Chief Rabbi of Israel ruled that some types of cultured meat are kosher, and if not made to resemble meat, can have pareve status.[245]

Islamic dietary practices have also been considered.[246] Amid discussion following the presentation of the 2013 Maastricht burger, Abdul Qahir Qamar of the International Islamic Fiqh Academy said that cultured meat “will not be considered meat from live animals, but will be cultured meat.” As long as the cells are not from pigs, dogs, and other haram animals, the meat would be considered vegetative and “similar to yogurt and fermented pickles.”[247]

Catholicism, which excludes eating meat in certain days along the year (Lent, Holy Week), has not pronounced on whether cultivated meat is banned (as it happens with meat) or not (as with any other food as vegetables or fish). Hinduism typically excludes the consumption of beef, such as steak and burgers. Chandra Kaushik, president of the Hindu Mahasabha, said about cultured beef that he would “not accept it being traded in a marketplace in any form or being used for a commercial purpose.”[247]

Economic

Cultured meat is significantly more costly than conventional meat. In a March 2015 interview, Post said that the marginal cost of his team’s original €250,000 burger was now €8.00. He estimated that technological advancements would allow the product to be cost-competitive to traditionally sourced beef in approximately ten years.[248] In 2018, Memphis Meats reduced the cost of production to $1,700 per pound.[249] In 2019, Eat Just said it cost about US$50 to produce one chicken nugget.[250] The company’s cultured chicken nuggets, now available at Singapore restaurant 1880, retail around US$17 as part of a set meal;[251] however, this retail price is below cost. As of 2021, most companies report a production cost of $100 or more per meal-sized serving.[252] A 2019 study estimated that, with current technology, the actual production cost of cultured meat was over $400,000 per kilogram. A 2022 study estimated that, if dramatic advances drove medium costs down to $3.74 per liter, large-scale production costs might optimistically fall to $63 per kilogram over the next few years. The main drivers of cost would be growth medium (accounting for $19.7/kg), labor ($17.7/kg), and bioreactor repairs ($5.47/kg). Competing with wholesale beef ($6/kg) would require reducing all three of these costs.[253]

Farmers

A scientific paper published in Front. Sustain. Food Syst. addresses the social and economic opportunities and challenges of cultured and plant-based meat for rural producers. According to this research, cellular agriculture offers “opportunities such as growing crops as ingredients for feedstock for cultured meat; raising animals for genetic material for cultured meat; producing cultured meat in bioreactors at the farm level; transitioning into new sectors; new market opportunities for blended and hybrid animal- and alt-meat products; and new value around regenerative or high-animal welfare farming.” Some challenges are also identified, with possible “loss of livelihood or income for ranchers and livestock producers and for farmers growing crops for animal feed; barriers to transitioning into emerging alt-meat sectors; and the possibility of exclusion from those sectors.” Some farmers already see the potential of cellular agriculture. For instance, Illtud Dunsford comes from a long line of farmers in Wales and established his cultured meat company Cellular Agriculture Ltd in 2016.[254]

Continuing development

Education

In 2015, Maastricht University hosted the first International Conference on Cultured Meat.[255] New Harvest[256]—a 501(c)(3) research institute—as well as The Good Food Institute[257] host annual conferences to convene industry leaders, scientists, investors, and potential collaborators. The two organizations also fund public research and produce educational content. Organizations such as the Cellular Agriculture Society and similar organizations in Canada, France, Australia, and New Zealand were founded to advocate for cultured meat in their respective countries.[258] Publications such as Cell Agri and Protein Report have also provided updates concerning technology and business within the field.[259][260]

Research

Research continues on many fronts, including entomocultureinteractome maps of cardiac tissue,[261] substrate design,[261] scaffold design,[261] nutritional profile,[261] reaction kinetics, transport phenomena, mass transfer limitations and metabolic stoichiometric requirements,[261] and bioprinting process.[261]

Accelerators and incubators

Multiple venture capital firms and accelerator/incubator programs focus on assisting cultured technology startups, or plant-based protein companies in general. The Big Idea Ventures (BIV) Venture Capital firm launched their New Protein Fund to invest in emerging cell and plant-based food companies in New York and Singapore. They invested in MeliBio, Actual Veggies, Biftek.co, Orbillion Bio, Yoconut, Evo, WildFor and Novel Farms.[262] Indie Bio is a biology oriented accelerator program that has invested in Memphis Meats, Geltor, New Age Meats and Finless Foods.[263]

Cultured meat has often featured in science fiction. The earliest mention may be in Two Planets (1897) by Kurd Lasswitz, where “synthetic meat” is one of the varieties of synthetic food introduced on Earth by Martians. Other notable books mentioning artificial meat include Methuselah’s Children (1941) by Robert A. HeinleinAshes, Ashes (1943) by René BarjavelThe Space Merchants (1952) by Frederik Pohl and C.M. KornbluthThe Restaurant at the End of the Universe (1980) by Douglas AdamsLe Transperceneige (Snowpiercer) (1982) by Jacques Lob and Jean-Marc RochetteNeuromancer (1984) by William GibsonOryx and Crake (2003) by Margaret AtwoodDeadstock (2007) by Jeffrey ThomasAccelerando (2005) by Charles StrossWare Tetralogy by Rudy RuckerDivergent (2011) by Veronica Roth; and the Vorkosigan Saga (1986–2018) by Lois McMaster Bujold.[citation needed]

In film, artificial meat has featured prominently in Giulio Questi‘s 1968 drama La morte ha fatto l’uovo (Death Laid an Egg) and Claude Zidi‘s 1976 comedy L’aile ou la cuisse (The Wing or the Thigh). “Man-made” chickens also appear in David Lynch‘s 1977 surrealist horror, Eraserhead. Most recently, it was also featured prominently as the central theme of the movie Antiviral (2012).[citation needed] The Starship Enterprise from the TV and movie franchise Star Trek apparently provides a synthetic meat,[264] although crews from The Next Generation and later use replicators.[citation needed] In the ABC sitcom Better Off Ted (2009–2010), the episode “Heroes” features Phil (Jonathan Slavin) and Lem (Malcolm Barrett) trying to grow cowless beef.[265]

In the movie Galaxy Quest during the dinner scene, Tim Allen‘s character refers to his steak tasting like “real Iowa beef”.[citation needed] In the videogame Project Eden, the player characters investigate a cultured meat company called Real Meat.[citation needed] In The Expanse, “vat-grown” meat is produced to feed the people who live on spaceships/space stations away from Earth, due to the exorbitant cost of importing real meat.[citation needed] Cultured meat was a subject on an episode of The Colbert Report on 17 March 2009.[266]

In February 2014, a biotech startup called BiteLabs ran a campaign to generate popular support for artisanal salami made with meat cultured from celebrity tissue samples.[267] The campaign became popular on Twitter, where users tweeted at celebrities asking them to donate muscle cells to the project.[268] Media reactions to BiteLabs variously identified the startup as a satire on startup culture,[269] celebrity culture,[270] or as a discussion prompt on bioethical concerns.[271] While BiteLabs claimed to be inspired by the success of Sergey Brin‘s burger, the company is seen as an example of critical design rather than an actual business venture.[citation needed]

In late 2016, cultured meat was involved in a case in the episode “How The Sausage Is Made” of CBS show Elementary.[272] Cultured meat was profiled in the 2020 Canadian documentary film Meat the Future.[273] In the 2020 video game Cyberpunk 2077, multiple cultured meat products are for sale, due to the high cost of natural meat. This includes “EEZYBEEF”, made from in vitro cultured muscle cells taken from cattle, and the flatworm culture based “Orgiatic” which comes in several flavors.[citation needed]

Fermentation

Acellular agriculture is producing animal products synthesized from non-living material. Such products include milk, honey, eggs, cheese, and gelatin which are made of various proteins rather than cells.[274] These proteins must be fermented much like in recombinant protein production, alcohol brewing and the generation of many plant-based products like tofu, tempeh and sauerkraut.[275]

The Impossible Burger was made with fermented heme proteins.

Proteins are coded for by specific genes, the genes coding for the protein of interest are synthesized into a plasmid—a closed loop of double helical genetic information. This plasmid, called recombinant DNA, is then inserted into a bacterial specimen. For this to happen, the bacteria needs to be competent (i.e. able to accept foreign, extracellular DNA) and able to horizontally transfer genes (i.e. integrate the foreign genes into its own DNA). Horizontal gene transfer is significantly more challenging in eukaryotic organisms than prokaryotic organisms because the former have both a cell membrane and a nuclear membrane which the plasmid needs to penetrate whereas prokaryotic organisms only have a cell membrane. For this reason, prokaryotic bacteria are often favoured. In order to make such a bacteria temporarily competent, it can be exposed to a salt such as calcium chloride, which neutralizes the negative charges on the cell membrane’s phosphate heads as well as the negative charges on the plasmid to prevent the two from repelling. The bacteria can incubate in warm water, opening large pores on the cell surface through which the plasmid can enter.[276]

Next, the bacteria is fermented in sugar, which encourages it to grow and duplicate. In the process it expresses its DNA as well as the transferred plasmid resulting in protein.[citation needed] Finally, the solution is purified to separate out the residual protein. This can be done by introducing an antibody raised against the protein of interest that will kill bacteria cells that do not contain the protein. Through centrifugation, the solution can be spun around an axis with sufficient force to separate solids from liquids. Alternatively it could be soaked in a buffered ionic solution that employs osmosis to leach the water from bacteria and kill them.[277]

Eating poop to elevate hunger may seem unusual, but it can be linked to hormonal changes and digestive processes.

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IN THE 50’S AND 60’S THERE WAS AN OLD SAYING PEOPLE WOULD USE WHEN THEY WERE REALLY ANGRY AT SOMEONE:   “EAT SHIT AND DIE!”

WEF: Public Must Consume ‘Human Waste’ to Fight ‘Climate Change’

The World Economic Forum (WEF) is urging governments around the globe to begin recycling “human waste” for public consumption to fight “climate change.”

The plan involves diverting human feces and urine captured from sewage back into the food supply.

The effort is being promoted to tackle “global warming” by reducing the alleged “carbon emissions” from food production.

The WEF, which is pressuring mainstream media outlets to begin pushing the narrative, is attempting to convince the public that eating our own feces and drinking our own urine is an essential part of fighting climate change.

WEF founder Klaus Schwab and his allies are determined to destroy every last pleasure known to man.

According to Yahoo.com, in the near future beer will have an extra ingredient – our own urine.

And obviously, California is fully signed up to the globalist agenda, happily agreeing to drink their own urine to fight so-called climate change.

The city of Los Angeles’ plans are even bigger than that.

The city has set out to recycle 100% of its wastewater by 2035 per a pledge made by Democrat Mayor Eric Garcetti several years ago.

In order to achieve this, LA’s Hyperion Water Reclamation Plant – which currently only treats wastewater so it’s clean enough to release into Santa Monica Bay – must be completely converted into an advanced water purification facility that produces urine that’s clean enough to consume.

What else are they going to use to wash the bugs down?

But the elite will not be happy until every last one of us is engaging in our own personal humiliation ritual, consuming our own excrementassuming Klaus Schwab decides you are one of the lucky ones to survive the upcoming mass extinction event they keep threatening us with.

The head of the UK’s Environment Agency, who is linked to the World Economic Forum, says that common people need to be “less squeamish” about drinking “toilet-to-tap” water from sewage plants, as countries and states around the world move towards recycling sewage for human consumption, falling into lockstep with WEF ideology.

According to an op-ed in The Times, Sir James Bevan, whose views have previously been disseminated by the WEF, writes that “drinking recycled sewage is the future.”

“If we are going to get there, we are all going to have to think differently. Some of these measures will be unpopular, so future governments will need to show political will, he said.

It’s no surprise the unelected global elite are trying to give the people exactly the opposite of what they want.

And it doesn’t stop with forcing us to drink urine.

Make no mistake, the globalist elite are also determined to force us to eat our own poop.

NASA is at the forefront in the race to develop the technology to recycle human feces into food.

According to Science AlertThe food that will sustain future generations as we colonize our way across space may be none other than our own sh*t, if a new NASA-funded project is successful.”

But they don’t want to call it by its real name.

They are using terms like biosolids instead.

It’s a nice way to smooth out the language, isn’t it?

The global elite love to use doublespeak and jargon to confuse the masses.

Is it torture? No, it’s enhanced interrogation techniques. Is that a bribe? No, it’s a constitutionally protected political contribution.

Calling human feces “biosolids” or something else is simply the next step in the progression of things.

And the WEF has been intent for years on bringing human poop to the table.

Japanese researchers were funded in 2012 to create a commercial product that researchers were calling the Sh*t Burger.

If you have been paying attention to the WEF’s policies in recent times you will realize that this is not really about saving the world.

WEF policies all have one thing in common: they dehumanize, degrade, and mock us.

They are designed to take away all of the joys of life and inflict maximum pain.

The campaign to force humanity to give up meat and subsist on bugs and crickets is a good example.

Then there is the depopulation drive, which was a conspiracy theory for a long time but is now completely out in the open.

They aren’t even trying to pretend they don’t want you dead anymore.

At what point do we stop and say “enough”?

How many times does the World Economic Forum have to declare its sinister intentions before the world stops and listens?

Of course, the mainstream has been co-opted by the World Economic Forum, and they will try to cancel you if you dare to speak sense about any of these issues.

According to the mainstream in 2020, obesity is healthy.

The vaccines are not causing people to keel over and die.

Hunter Biden is the model first son.

And abortion is “love.”

George Orwell warned us about these times. He said they would convince us that war is peace. How right he was.

SPACER

2 years ago
8.15K
RealTruthRealNews.com: www.Rumble.com/Diamondz

The WEF is now calling for all of us to eat human feces and drink urine if we want to be one of the lucky few to survive the great depopulation they have planned for humanity. The WEF, which has ordered mainstream media outlets to begin pushing the narrative, is attempting to convince the gullible masses that eating our own feces and drinking our own urine is an essential part of fighting climate change. Klaus Schwab’s cronies are determined to destroy every last pleasure known to man.
Video source: The People’s Voice on Rumble

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1 year ago

NO JOKE! NOW THEY WANT YOU TO EAT POOP & DRINK PEE! WEF BOMBSHELL!
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Mirrored – Fair Use (share) – 💉 “WE WILL NOT COMPLY” ☠️ 👀 – Proving Conspiracy Facts Everyday – ‘Justice Will Only Come When We Stop Turning A Blind Eye From The Truth’ 👀 – Pray! The People’s Voice In a move straight out of a dystopian nightmare, the FDA has just greenlit a lab-grown, fake “butter” cooked up by a Bill Gates–funded startup in California. No labels. No warnings. Already slipping into the food supply via restaurants and bakeries across America. The kicker? It was approved using only the Gates Foundation’s own safety claims—no independent tests, no animal trials, no public review. And when you find out what it’s actually made from… let’s just say, this isn’t the first time Gates has been caught trying to quietly feed it to the masses. https://rumble.com/v6xevb0-bill-gates-fake-butter-made-from-human-waste-approved-by-fda-without-safety.html?e9s=src_v1_cbl%2Csrc_v1_ucp_a Related Links: https://qalerts.app/about/ TRAITORS – ‘We Caught Them All’ https://www.bitchute.com/video/6nR77FTxC78m/ Even the Non-Humans are NOT Above the Law! – (Obey! ‘They Live’ demonic psychopath version) https://www.bitchute.com/video/vdfN46uQfzwp/ The Reality of Black Goo and Programmable Smart Dust (A.I.) [Demonic] Nanotechnology – compilation https://www.bitchute.com/video/c5mUb7UF59o3/ The Sum of all Fears – It’s Going to Be Biblical! – ‘The Black Sun’ https://www.bitchute.com/video/TtUNwbYoV7wx/ The Jeffrey Epstein Survivor Story The Deep State Does Not Want You To Hear! (compilation version) https://www.bitchute.com/video/A3CqQnpN4q0K/ Joe Rogan Admits ‘It Does Make Sense’ as Navy SEAL Vet Tells Him the Truth About Scripture (Mandela Effect compilation) https://www.bitchute.com/video/A3CqQnpN4q0K/ Hulk Hogan Was About To Expose Hollywood Adrenochrome Industry Before He Died (compilation) https://www.bitchute.com/video/A3CqQnpN4q0K/ The Nefarious Science Behind the Clot Shots (Psychopathic compilation version) https://www.bitchute.com/video/A3CqQnpN4q0K/ DID OBAMA VINDICATE TINA PETERS AND PRESIDENT TRUMP BACK IN 2016? https://www.bitchute.com/video/a7Xvw3yGkTN6/ Help Save the Papacy from the Heretical Freemasons Who Have Elected Prevost, Invalidly! (From Rome) https://www.bitchute.com/video/98taModdkatT ‘GROOMED FOR DESTRUCTION AND PUNISHMENT’ JUNE 21, 2025 ([DS – Obama] https://www.bitchute.com/video/TJQfYNpm4fpZ/ An Italian Pathologist found the PINEAL GLAND completely destroyed on all the people who were vaxxed https://www.bitchute.com/video/UTCJeTzR2XW1/ The Hidden Evil Surrounding the Dark Alliance Between the Deep State and Deep Church ‘They Live’ https://www.bitchute.com/video/zkTIhccqfxa7/ Putin Exposes Israeli Child Trafficking Network Supplying Adrenochrome to Hollywood and DC https://www.bitchute.com/video/6SfiWEw3gtfs/ Leonardo DiCaprio Honors Robert De Niro with Palme d’Or | Cannes 2025 – (Obey! ‘They Live’ edition) https://www.bitchute.com/video/63WuSenIqOGs/ BREAKING DOGE BOMBSHELL! Elon’s Government Investigation Agency Discovers MASSIVE Pervert Cult https://www.bitchute.com/video/9BhRM4YJHaEm/ Obama Exposed as Major Adrenochrome Trafficker by Official Govt Documents https://www.bitchute.com/video/09eTjnYKxk3z/ HHS Kills Mega Vax Contract — Stinchfield and Dr. Drew Expose the Truth! https://www.bitchute.com/video/oQ2wDWr5UH19/ Dr. Jane Ruby: Overcoming Psychopaths and Global Tyranny – Francis Installed! https://www.bitchute.com/video/J6ZVtYjAYc2g/ The New Pope and the Direction of the Catholic Church with Mike McCormick https://www.bitchute.com/video/v21Lcnp82i0E/ JD Vance speaks at National Catholic Prayer Breakfast- ‘Vance, Please Wake Up and Smell the Covfefe’ https://www.bitchute.com/video/eS8DUmoo6D7G/ #Operation WarpSpeed Explanation – Compilation Update 2025 https://www.bitchute.com/video/yJcAW49v3aHS/ Forgive and save your own heart and soul, Biblical Truth, God Wins (The Golden Ratio Compilation) https://www.bitchute.com/video/RF4uvjsj1H6w/ Dycenian Glasses and the story behind it! (Obey! ‘They Live’ compilation version) https://www.bitchute.com/video/mDiZGOgJDI1e 2025-03-14: Gene Decode on Deep Underground Military Bases and much more! https://www.bitchute.com/video/2kpJwHJpU0U5 100% Proof of the Demonic Liberal Psychopathic Hivemind! – OBEY! ‘They Live’ edition https://www.bitchute.com/video/xsGOuynFWcLo/ DNC Insider: Seth Rich Files Destroyed to Shield VIP Pizzagate Arrests [Isaac Kappy compilation] https://www.bitchute.com/video/eRPRb4rtzvIv/ Obey! ‘They Live’(mRNA – A.I. Cabal Traitors on Display) (Pfizer CEO Liar/Cheat/Murderer) https://www.bitchute.com/video/cpvbfNnxYjt9/ Deep Underground Military Bases are being cleared by Earth Alliance (Level 10 intel) https://www.bitchute.com/video/uU7Qe1ps5uE8/ The Golden Ratio – Evidence of God (MyCatholicRedPill Song Compilation 432Hz -Marcum) https://www.bitchute.com/video/Warzm6ctcQF7/

SPACER
The Nordic Food Lab advises: Eat blood, bugs and poop to save the world

Scientists and chefs unite to transform how we view food

The thought of eating bugs, faeces or blood doesn’t sound very enticing, but according to a team of scientists in Denmark, they are a few of the things we should eat if we want our food to be both sustainable and healthy.
Set up on a boat in 2008 in the Danish capital of Copenhagen by Michelin-starred head chef René Redzepi and culinary entrepreneur Claus Mayer, the Nordic Food Lab’s initial goal was to acquire a deeper understanding of the flavors and gastronomical potential of Scandinavia.
Now housed in a lab at the University of Copenhagen, the Nordic Lab’s researchers have been travelling the world to piece together a holistic and sustainable approach to eating that is also delicious. Along the way, the Nordic Lab team has galvanized scientists, artists, chefs, designers and educators to join their cause.
“We try to work with every type of produce,” explains Roberto Flore, Head of Culinary Research and Development at the lab. “Insects, blood, jelly fish, fermented products that sometimes smell and develop mould, and the products look rotten. It’s about giving people more confidence with different produce and reconnecting with process of producing food. One of the main problems with sustainability is we are completely disconnected to food,” he says. “We don’t know how it is produced or to how handle certain products. That is a huge problem, and we risk losing knowledge collected over thousands of years in the next few decades. It’s important for us to document this knowledge and make it available to the world.”
Researchers are currently attempting to come up with ways of making edible insects, such as ants and larvae, more appetizing to the unintiated palate. They have also studied how animal blood could be used as an egg substitute for those allergic to it due to its coagulating properties. They have even gone so far as to suggest that faeces should be studied as a potential food source, arguing that young elephants, hippos, koalas, rabbits and pandas eat their mothers’ faeces in order to bolster their immune systems.
Flore points out that caterpillar faeces is already fermented and used to flavor rice in Japan, while kopi Iowak, digested by the civet, is the most expensive coffee in the world. He says that working at the lab has transformed how he views food given the exposure he has had on his travels around the world, which has opened his eyes to what is truly edible and inedible.
“At the moment, gastronomy that is high-quality and sustainable is only available for people who are in the position to buy luxury produce. We want good food available for everyone. That is our main goal.  Embracing other cultures is one of our main aims. Recognising other cultures and someone else’s values teaches us something and changes our approach to food. We are living now in an international system and we should really recognise ourselves as world citizens.”

SPACER
People in what we used to call “THIRD WORLD NATIONS” often had to eat whatever they could find or dig up, just to stay alive.  So, poverty had a lot to do with their diet.  More importantly, those nations were not “CHRISTIAN NATIONS” they are and historically have been PAGAN.  Their value system is not the same as those of us living in the USA which has historically been “ONE NATION UNDER GOD THE CREATOR AND THE ONE WHO ENDOWED US WITH INALIENABLE RIGHTS”.  The entities worshiped by PAGANS are demonic.  The DEMONS HATE HUMANS.  They are behind the eating by humans of those things which God deems abominable.  They drive their hosts to do those things to humiliate them and alienate them from the Creator.

GOD has very clear commandments against eating blood from any species, against even touching feces or urine let alone eating it or drinking it, against eating any bugs that crawl.  Only certain bugs are allowed as food according to God’s Laws.  Crickets, Grasshoppers and Locusts.  We find all those things forbidden by GOD to be disgusting not because of our conditioning, but because GOD created us to be disgusted by them.

The Bible prohibits eating certain insects, particularly those that have wings and crawl. Leviticus 11:20-22 states, “Don’t eat insects that have wings and crawl. Even the thought of eating them should make you sick!”. Additionally, Leviticus 11:42 mentions that you must not eat anything that crawls on its belly or anything that walks on all fours, as they are considered detestable. These dietary laws reflect God’s guidelines for clean and unclean foods, which can provide insight into our understanding of food. Bible Gateway+2
The Bible’s first prohibition against consuming blood comes in Genesis 9:2-4, where God tells Noah, “Everything that lives and moves about will be food for you. Just as I gave you the green plants, I now give you everything. But you must not eat meat that has its lifeblood still in it.”  “For the life of every creature is its blood: its blood is its life.”  Leviticus 17:14

You are to abstain from food sacrificed to idols, from blood, from the meat of strangled animals and from sexual immorality. You will do well to avoid these things.”  Acts 15

Judgment and Humility: The biblical narrative often uses excrement as a metaphor for degradation and the consequences of turning away from God, emphasizing the need for spiritual cleanliness. 

Overall, the Bible reflects on the importance of cleanliness and the spiritual implications of human waste, serving as a reminder of God’s holiness and the need for purity in the lives of His people.

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All the propaganda in the world could not make me think bugs, or blood, or feces or urine to be appetizing.  I would rather die than consume any of those things.  God’s commandments are for our benefit and protection.
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 By Alice || Edited by Go Ask Alice Editorial Team || Last edited Aug 18, 2023
86% of users thought this Q&A was helpful

Dear Alice,

I’ve always been fascinated with scat play.  (YUCK!) My question is this: is consuming (eating) your partner’s feces safe? Or will it make me sick… or worse (is it poisonous)?

Dear Reader,

For those who have never heard of it before, coprophagia, or the practice of eating your own or another person’s feces, may give new meaning to the term “sexual appetite.” Coprophagia is often a component of the wider term coprophilia, which refers to getting sexual pleasure from the excretion of human feces, whether it’s from its smell, touch, taste or sight. Scat is another term for feces, and scat sex or scat play refers to using scat in sexual activities. Although playing with someone’s scat is generally regarded as safe if proper protection is used (think latex gloves, dental dams, washing with soap before and after sex)eating someone else’s scat—or even your own—can greatly increase your risk of infections. Feces can contain a variety of disease-causing bacteria, viruses, and parasitic worms. This doesn’t mean that eating feces is necessarily poisonous, but it can make someone sick.

Shigella, vibrio, salmonella, and Escherichia coli (abbreviated as E. coli) are four bacteria commonly present in fecal matter. These bacteria, along with parasites like amoebas and giardia, can cause severe diarrhea, abdominal pain and cramping, bloody stools, fever, nausea and vomiting. Both hepatitis A and E may also be transmitted through contact with fecal matter. While there are very few cases of hepatitis E in the United States (US)—it’s mostly common in developing regions with contaminated freshwater supply and inadequate sanitation. Hepatitis A, on the other hand, is frequently reported.

Aside from direct fecal consumption, many of these infections can occur just by being in close contact with feces. If your mouth, nose, or any orifice or open cuts or sores touches something that’s had contact with feces (e.g., kissing an unwashed hand after using the bathroom or drinking water contaminated by infected fecal matter), infection is possible as well.

The best way to prevent infection is to limit direct contact between orifices and fecal matter. This might mean refraining from licking of the anus (known as rimming) or using a protective barrier such as a dental dam to cover the anus if you choose to engage in that activity. It can also be important to make sure any objects that are inserted in the anus are kept away from the mouth until they have been properly cleaned. Using condoms during anal sex can also help reduce the possibility of being exposed fecal matter, especially if you plan to engage in oral sex after anal sex has occurred. For those with a vulva, there’s an additional concern regarding urinary tract and vaginal infections, which can be caused when bacteria present in fecal matter enter or come into contact with the vulva. This is way it can be important to practice proper hygiene and wiping techniques.

The idea of experimenting with scat play might heat things up in the bedroom (or bathroom, or anywhere else you choose), and it can be helpful to consider the risks of a behavior before experimenting. Hoping this information has helped curb your curiosity.

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Coprophagy :: The Human Exception

Eat shit” It’s a phrase we’ve all heard, but have ever truly thought about it? Courtney tells us about coprophagy and why so many animals do it and where this phrase originally came from

Nature & Eating shit

  • Insects   /   Rabbits   /  Dogs

Humans eating shit

  • Inuit of Northern Canada and Greenland have a dish called Urumiit that is made from ptarmagain droppings.

EpisodeFile 0135: Crappy Caraboo Metal

Release Date: Aug 2 2024

Researched and presented by Courtney

Urumiit 

The droppings are collected when they have dried out during the winter months (fresh droppings in the summer are thought to be unpleasant to eat), a time in which food sources are scarce, especially on land, so the pre-digested willow and birch plant matter in ptarmigan scat provides a much needed source of nutrition in a harsh environment. One ptarmigan may defecate as many as 50 times in one spot, so urumiit is very plentiful and easy to gather. The pellet-shaped droppings are generally cooked in rancidified seal fat before eating; sometimes mixed with seal or ptarmigan meat or blood.  Historically in some areas, the meat cooked with urumiit is prepared by being pre-chewed by the women of a household. The smell of cooked urumiit in rancid fat has been compared to that of Gorgonzola cheese. It has been cited as a dish which non-Inuit are particularly likely to find disgusting, and as an example of how much taste in food can vary between cultural contexts.

ptarmigan
The rock ptarmigan (Lagopus muta) is a medium-sized game bird in the grouse family. It is known simply as the ptarmigan in Europe. It is the official bird for the Canadian territory of Nunavut,[4] where it is known as the aqiggiq (ᐊᕿᒡᒋᖅ), and the official game bird for the province of Newfoundland and Labrador.[
  • There are also teas and coffees that are considered delicacies that are first “processed” by being fed to an animal first before using. Some of these include Black Ivory Coffee from Thailand where coffee beans are fed to elephants before being collected from their feces. Kopi luwak or civet coffee uses the same process but with Civets not elephants. There are also tea plants that are only fertilized using Panda dung which is supposed to influence the flavor of the tea leaves.

  • There’s also a mortifying cheese called casu martzu from Sardinia where a cheese is “fermented” with the maggots of the cheese fly, which lives in the cheese and defecates which influences the cheese’s flavor. This cheese is super dangerous to consume if the larvae are ingested because they can take up residence in your intestines.

  • Some traditional medicines call for animal feces and urine to be used as treatments. The Beadouin use camel poop as a way to treat dysentery but there is only anecdotal evidence that this works.

  • Western medicine used to use tasting urine or feces as a way to diagnose patients. Sweet urine is a hallmark of diabetes. In modern Western medicine, there is also a way to transplant fecal matter from a healthy individual to one that is not healthy, sometimes by ingesting a caspule with poop in it. THIS IS NOT A CURE ALL AND SHOULD NOT JUST BE DONE BECAUSE YOU SEE IT ONLINE. PLEASE FOR THE LOVE OF GOD. There is evidence to show that these fecal transplants can be helpful for several different chronic illnesses such as Fecal Transplant: What It Is, What It Treats, Procedure & Risks (clevelandclinic.org)

  • A cult in Thailand ate feces, urine, skin flakes, cigarette butts and saliva. The cult, in Chaiyaphum province would eat these … items from their holy man Tawee Nanla, as they believed it would be healing for them. The cult had generally unsafe food practices and had highly unsafe amount of mold and there were dead bodies….

  • People also engage in autocorpophagy or eating of poop from humans. While “night soil” has long been a source of fertilizer for plants, some humans skip the veg and go straight for the poop. There are two reasons why people eat poop. One is kink. The other is mental illness, as it’s generally a sign of schizophrenia, pica etc. It’s not safe to eat your own poop. Please don’t do it.

Rajesh Gandhi
February 20, 2017

Scripture surprisingly speaks about dung in more than two dozen verses. As far as we can tell from Scripture, God created human bodies to excrete solid waste as a natural process, and we know that process is essential for maintaining life.

A close examination of the following passage concerning human dung, however, teaches us some truths about God that we might not otherwise think would be true.

Deu 23:13 And thou shalt have a paddle upon thy weapon; and it shall be, when thou wilt ease thyself abroad, thou shalt dig therewith, and shalt turn back and cover that which cometh from thee:

14 For the LORD thy God walketh in the midst of thy camp, to deliver thee, and to give up thine enemies before thee; therefore shall thy camp be holy: that he see no unclean thing in thee, and turn away from thee.

Through this divine revelation given to Israel, God commanded them to cover their excrement when they would go to relieve themselves (Deut. 23:13). The explanation of this command in the following verse makes clear that the reason for this directive was not concerning potential health ramifications of leaving human excrement strewn about uncovered in the field.

Rather, God revealed that they were to do this because He walked in the midst of their camp and therefore their camp had to be holy, including that there would not be seen in the midst of the camp any unclean thing that God would see and therefore turn away from them. Even though God created the bodies of the Israelites to function as they did, nonetheless, the excrement that their bodies expelled was an unclean thing in the sight of God and something that was unfitting to be seen openly because of His holiness.

Furthermore, Scripture says that God sees everything and nothing is hid from His eyes, which therefore would include dung whether it is in a human body or on the ground or covered under something. Yet, God informs us in Deuteronomy 23:13-14 that human dung uncovered on the ground is something that is unclean in His sight and something that He does not want to see among His people.

Beyond the obvious relevance of this passage for what should be done when humans defecate, this revelation has other important ramifications.

God’s Holiness and His Separateness from Something that is Not Sinful

First, many conceive of God’s holiness as His separateness from sin and sinful things. This passage, however, shows us that God’s holiness also includes His separateness from something that is not sinful and yet it is something that is indecent in His sight. Our understanding of God’s holiness must include this important truth that He has revealed to us.

Talking Unnecessarily about or Joking about Human Excrement

Second, this passage applies to what believers talk about and joke about. Because God indwells us, we are to be holy as He is holy. Because God considers uncovered human excrement to be something that is unclean and unfitting to be seen openly, we rightly infer that God also does not want us to talk unnecessarily about human dung.

Although some people try to support joking about human excrement by saying that it is just the product of a natural process that God made to take place in our bodiesDeuteronomy 23:13-14 shows us that such reasoning is invalid. Yes, it is the product of a natural process, but no, that reality does not change the fact that God views seeing it uncovered as an indecent thing.

Because uncovered human excrement is something that God says is indecent in His sight, we can be confident that talking unnecessarily about or joking about human excrement has no place in the life of a consecrated believer who desires to please God with speech that is edifying, as God commands that it should be.

Conclusion

Let us profit fully from this important revelation that God has given to us in Deuteronomy 23:13-14!

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CYC-Net
Rituals of humiliation and exclusion – CYC-Net
Psyche
The history of humiliation points to the future of human dignity
What are humiliation rituals?

Humiliation rituals are a type of ritual that is designed to cause shame or embarrassment to the target. They can be used for a variety of purposes, such as revenge, punishment, or to gain power over someone. Humiliation rituals are often associated with black magic, but they can also be found in other forms of witchcraft.    All magic and witchcraft and rebellion are evil in God’s eyes and are associated with the Devil and the powers of DARKNESS.

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The Power of Humiliation: An Occult and Psychological

Humiliation, a potent emotion often viewed negatively, holds a curious duality in both psychological and occult traditions. In both spheres, it is believed that the experiences and …

The Power of Humiliation: An Occult and Psychological Perspective

Humiliation, a potent emotion often viewed negatively, holds a curious duality in both psychological and occult traditions. In both spheres, it is believed that the experiences and energies associated with humiliation have the potential to break, transform, or elevate individuals. By examining these two parallel understandings, we may gain deeper insights into the intricate dance between our inner psyche and the external world.

The Psychological Aspect

The Mechanism of Humiliation:

Humiliation is an intense emotion where an individual perceives a lowering of their dignity or self-worth. It often stems from being devalued, rejected, or exposed. The immediate reactions can range from anger to withdrawal, and the long-term consequences can lead to chronic emotional issues, such as anxiety or depression.

Transformation through Humiliation:

Ironically, while many of us dread the prospect of humiliation, it can serve as a profound catalyst for personal growth. The very act of confronting our vulnerabilities can lead to self-awareness, resilience, and eventually, empowerment. Some psychotherapists believe that by working through the pain of humiliation, one can integrate the fragmented parts of the self and achieve greater wholeness.

HOGWASH!  That is just deception from the dark side.  The way to healing and empowerment is through relationship with your Heavenly Father.  TRUE EMPOWERMENT comes only from the HOLY SPIRIT.  The powers of Darkness are not where you want to go for help or healing.

The Occult Aspect

Humiliation in Initiation:

In many esoteric traditions, humiliation is a deliberate part of the initiatory process. It serves as a symbolic death of the ego, allowing the initiate to shed their old identity and be reborn into a new state of being. The reasoning here is simple: to rise, one must first be brought low.

MORE HOGWASH! What occurs in humiliation rituals is the fracturing of the human spirit/soul and the introduction of demonic entities into the human subject.  This does not help the human in any way , any area.  It is totally a course toward destruction and spiritual death.

Alchemy of the Soul:

In the world of the occult, emotions and experiences are viewed as energies that can be transmuted. Humiliation, with its raw and potent force, can be likened to the ‘prima materia’ or the primary substance in alchemy. It is raw and chaotic but holds the potential for transformation. With the right guidance, one can harness the energy of humiliation to catalyze spiritual growth, turning leaden experiences into golden wisdom.  Oh it brings transformation alright, but not in a good way.  Any widsom you might gain from it is the wrong kind.  The humiliation ritual is for the occultist to gain power and control of the subject being humiliated.  The spiritual transformation is the sacrifice of your spirit to allow the implantation of demonic spirits within you.

Interplay: The Psychological and the Occult

Though separated by language and framework, both traditions acknowledge the transformative power of humiliation. Where psychology might employ therapeutic techniques to help an individual cope with and grow from humiliation, the occult might use rituals, symbols, and metaphysical principles to achieve a similar goal.   Psychology is of the devil and serving the dark side shares all things in common withe the OCCULT.  They may use different terminology but that is just part of the deception.

Conclusion

Humiliation, though painful, has been recognized across different traditions and disciplines as a powerful force for transformation. Whether one looks at it through the lens of psychology or the mystique of the occult, the message remains consistent: experiences that break us can also make us, provided we approach them with understanding and intention. As we navigate the turbulent waters of humiliation, it may serve us well to remember that even in our most vulnerable moments, there lies a seed of potential growth and transcendence.    The damage done to human beings through this practice iis tragic  and can only truly be addressed spiritually by the grace of God.   The perpetrators of this torment are sick and souless.

The Unfortunate Reality of Hollywood Humiliation Rituals

But behind the glitz and glamour lies a darker side to the industry: humiliation rituals. These are practices that have been used for decades by powerful actors, directors, and producers to assert their dominance over those in less powerful positions. Let’s take a look at why these rituals exist and how they impact those subjected to them.

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Hexes and Humiliation: Exploring Humiliation Rituals as Revenge …

Global web iconwitchsymbols.com
https://witchsymbols.com › humiliation-rituals

Humiliation rituals are a type of ritual that is designed to cause shame or embarrassment to the target. They can be used for a variety of purposes, such as revenge, punishment, or to gain control over the subject…

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Humiliation: Definition, Rituals, & Trauma – The Berkeley Well …

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The Berkeley Well-Being Institute
https://www.berkeleywellbeing.com › humiliation.html

Humiliation rituals are surprisingly common in our culture, and I think they serve the purpose of telling people, “This is who you must be for us to accept you.”

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eating shit is the new thing A CALL FOR AN UPRISING 137K subscribers

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Poop for dinner anyone?
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🛑GET “DOENUT ILLUMINATI BOOK” & EXCLUSIVE CONTENT!!! https://www.patreon.com/doenut

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There have been reports in the News about Justin Bieber eating his own poop.  I read some articles about him coming out of a club, pooping in his pants and eating it, in public.  Poor Justin. Sadly he was snatched up by the Entertainment Industry at an early age.  Much like Brittany Spears, Justin has been abused and mistreated which has seriously affected him mentally, emotionally and spiritually!

Sadly, because of his popularity and the power of technology, many young people are being directly affected by this kind of insanity.  They see the stories and the videos and are affected by them in ways that can perceive and in ways they are too young to understand.  NO CHILD should be exposed to even the idea of someone doing something as sick and disgusting as eating poop.

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Irelynn Tube
6.2K views

Jul 27, 2017

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Daily Motion
https://www.dailymotion.com › video

justin bieber eats poop (parody) – video Dailymotion

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Parents, they are traumatizing and sexualizing our children in schools across the USA.  IF you don’t know what is happening at your child’s school you had better find out.  You will be shocked and horrified to learn what our children are being subjected to.

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The Salty Cracker
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What’s the POOP?

HOLD ON TO YOUR HATS FOLKS CAUSE THIS IS GOING TO BE A WILD RIDE!  I recommend that only those over 18 read this post.  There are some things in here that I would not want my children exposed to.  You may not catch the connections made in this post the first time through.  Read … Click Here to Read More

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Well, I think they’re still using fetus. Faking you out.
LiveScience.com

Steak Made from Human Exrement: Is It Safe?

Rachael Rettner/LiveScience.com</a>

The mere idea is stomach-churning: creating food from human feces.

But researchers in Japan say they have done just that. They have synthesized meat from proteins found in human waste, according to news reports.

While the concept of chowing down on steak derived from poop may not exactly be appetizing, we wondered: is this meat safe?

In theory, yes, experts say. But the meat must be cooked, which will kill any noxious pathogens before you eat it.

The Japanese researchers isolated proteins from bacteria in sewage. The poop-meat concoction is prepared by extracting the basic elements of food — protein, carbohydrates and fats — and recombining them.

The meat is made from 63 percent proteins, 25 percent carbohydrates, 3 percent lipids and 9 percent minerals, according to Digital Trends. Soy protein is added to the mix to increase the flavor, and food coloring is used to make the product appear red.

The researchers came up with the idea after Tokyo Sewage asked them to figure out a use for the abundance of sewage in mud, Digital Trends says.

Powell said the idea is not all that different from eating plants that have been fertilized with manure or other excrement, because the nutrients in the poop become part of the plants.   Humans are not supposed to eat anything fertilized with HUMAN EXCREMENT!!!  IT contains human DNA.

However, Powell said there is the potential for cross contamination in the laboratory where the poop meat is made. That’s why it’s a good thing the meat will eventually be cooked.

“I wouldn’t touch it, “ Powell said.

Pass it on: Meat made from poop is safe, but you should cook it before you eat it.

This story was provided by MyHealthNewsDaily. Follow MyHealthNewsDaily staff writer Rachael Rettner on Twitter @RachaelRettner.

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Best Ever Food Review Show
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This Japanese Scientist Made “Edible” Meat from Poop 12 Years Ago!

From Sewage to Steak: Japan’s Bold Solution to Food Sustainability

When we think of sustainable meat, images of lab-grown burgers or plant-based patties come to mind. But Japanese researcher Mitsuyuki Ikeda from the Okayama Laboratory has taken sustainability to an entirely new—and controversial—level: transforming human poop into edible protein.

Yes, you read that right.

The Science Behind the “Poo Patty”

At first glance, the idea of eating meat derived from sewage sounds like something out of a dystopian sci-fi novel. Yet, Professor Ikeda insists that this innovation could be the key to solving two major global crises: food shortages and environmental waste.

Here’s how it works:

  1. Extraction: Tokyo’s sewage sludge is packed with protein-rich bacteria.

  2. Processing: Using a machine called an “exploder,” the waste is broken down and combined with a reaction enhancer.

  3. Formation: The result? A protein-dense paste that’s 63% protein, 25% carbohydrates, 3% lipids, and 9% minerals—nutritionally comparable to beef.

  4. Flavoring: Soy is added for texture, and steak sauce masks any unpleasant origins.

Surprisingly, early taste-testers couldn’t distinguish it from real beef.

Why Turn Waste into Food?

Tokyo’s sewage system is overflowing with wastewater mud, and traditional disposal methods are costly and inefficient. When the Tokyo Sewage Department approached Professor Ikeda for a solution, he saw an opportunity to kill two birds with one stone: Reduce waste by repurposing sewage into something useful and cut methane emissions from livestock (cows are notorious for their greenhouse gas contributions).

“If we can shift even a fraction of meat consumption to this alternative, the environmental impact would be enormous,” argues Ikeda.

The Biggest Hurdles: Psychology and Price

Of course, there are two massive obstacles standing in the way of this sustainable meat revolution:

  1. The “Yuck” Factor

    Most people recoil at the thought of eating something derived from human waste“It’s all about perception,” says food psychologist Dr. Naomi Fujita. “If it’s safe, nutritious, and tastes good, the stigma could fade—just like it did with sushi in the West.”

  2. Production Costs

    Currently, producing this sustainable meat costs 10 to 20 times more than traditional beef. Scaling up manufacturing could lower prices, but fast-food chains would need to take the risk first.

Could This Be the Future of Food?

While the idea may seem revolting now, history shows that unconventional food sources often gain acceptance over timeInsects are now a protein staple in many countries. Lab-grown meat was once mocked but is now a billion-dollar industry.

“The biggest challenge isn’t the science—it’s convincing people to take the first bite,” admits Ikeda.

Final Thoughts: A Radical Step Toward Sustainability

Love it or hate it, Professor Ikeda’s waste-to-meat innovation forces us to rethink how we produce food in an overpopulated, climate-stressed world. Whether this sustainable meat becomes a mainstream option or remains a bizarre experiment depends on consumer acceptance and economic feasibility.

One thing’s for sure: the future of food is stranger than we ever imagined.

Shit Burger: Japanese Researcher Creates Artificial Meat From Human Feces 

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Diligence. This is SICK SHITE. You have been warned!
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THE FOLLOWING VIDEO IS EXTREMELY INFORMATIVE, PRESENTING THE HISTORY AND THE METHODOLOGY OF MK ULTRA MIND CONTROL. 

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billyjones
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 YOU HAVE SEEN HOW THEY GAIN CONTROL OF THE MINDS OF INDIVIDUALS.  NOW, TAKE A LOOK AT HOW THEY ARE CONTROLLING THE MINDS OF THE “MASSES”…LARGE POPULATIONS OF PEOPLE LIKE YOU AND ME.  INFACT, THE WHOLE WORLD – GENERAL PUBLIC.  YOU LIKELY PROTEST THAT YOU ARE NOT BEING CONTROLLED…BUT IT IS INDECTABLE… THERE IS NO WAY YOU WOULD KNOW.  BUT, IT IS OBVIOUSLY BEING BROADCAST ON THE ENTIRE POPULATION.  IF YOU ARE NOT PROTECTED… YOU ARE CONTROLLED.  PROTECTION CAN ONLY COME FROM ONE PLACE –  THIS IS A SPIRITUAL ATTACK AND THERE ARE ONLY TWO SPIRITUAL SOURCES GOOD/GOD AND EVIL/SATAN.  AND THERE IS ONLY ONE TRUE AND LIVING GOD – YHVH.  AND ONLY ONE SAVIOR YAHUSHUAH.   THE POWER TO OVERCOME THE WORKS OF THE ENEMY/SATAN COMES BY THE SPIRIT OF YHVH.   THE GIFT OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, PROVIDED BY THE BLOOD OF THE LAMB/YAHUSHUAH.  YOU CANNOT DEFEAT THE ENEMY IN YOUR FLESH.  YOU MUST HAVE THE SPIRIT OF GOD WITHIN YOU.  THE BLOOD OF YAHUSUAH COVERING YOU AND THE LOVE OF YHVH SURROUNDING YOU WITH HIS HEDGE OF PROTECTION.
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ARE YOU A CHIMERA?

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AS IT WAS IN THE DAYS OF NOAH!   The Nephilim had corrupted ALL FLESH.  Mixing the DNA and teaching humanity how to do the same.  The world had become so corrupted that there was no one left that was not corrupt in their FLESH.. EXECEPT for NOAH and his family.  That was the reason the … Click Here to Read More

Corrupt Food Industry / Population Control

I think that just about everyone will find  something in this post that will surprise them.  I know I did. More and more of the pieces are coming together.  The CONSPIRACY runs so deep and wide it makes it hard to detect and harder to believe. The elite have been poisoning us for quite a … Click Here to Read More

RESET EXPOSED DEMONIC

The Great Reset will be the end of America.  Our once great nation, will no longer exist as we knew it.  YOUR FREEDOMS will be gone.  Completely gone.   And on top of that, you will literally made to eat SHIT.   I used to listen to the stories about the elite and how they would eat … Click Here to Read More

The Global Diet – A Matter of Life or Death

UPDATE: 08/08/2021; 8:56:33 PM Tags: Food Degradation, Sustainable Lie, Edible Insects, Synthetic Meat, Poop Burgers, GMO FOOD, Something very grievous and frightening has been perpetrated on humans across the globe without their knowledge or permission.   We the people are being manipulated, steered and controlled on every level and in regard to every aspect of our … Click Here to Read More

Scientific Breakthrough for Animal Lovers!

HOLY COW!  This is the ultimate.  If this does not demonstrate the stupidity level of our current society, I don’t know what does.  Brainwashed and mindless they follow the trends and buy the lie.  This guy says that “WE” have created a false concept that meat means animals.  Really? I mean Really?  How foolish of … Click Here to Read More

THERE IS NO FOOD LIKE OUR OLD FOOD

GOD HELP US ALL!  WE ARE AT THE DOOR OF THE APOCALYPSE!!  FOOD IS THEIR MAJOR WEAPON. We have been warning you, the elite have been telling you they are moving you into a new way of eating.  They tell you it is to save the EARTH.  THEY ARE LIARS! Please folks if you do … Click Here to Read More

Nourishment

I realize that there is a lot of information in this post.  To some it may seem like over kill.  But, I felt it was necessary to present all of this together, in great detail, so that people can actually see how they are destroying us through the food we eat.  They are doing it … Click Here to Read More

Cannibal Zombie Apocalypse is FORMING

The original post on this topic somehow got really insanely corrupted.  I have no clue how and it took a lot to resolve the issue.  So here goes again.  I have restored it, repaired it and updated it.  WHY?? Because this topic is much more relevant and important NOW than it was when I first … Click Here to Read More

CLIMATE CHANGE AND CO2

Here is the TRUTH you need to KNOW before it is TOO LATE!! Meat in general is the most nutrient-dense food group, rich in complex proteins, healthy fats, and bioavailable micronutrients that you can only get from animal products Today we are going to focus on “Climate Change”/ Global Warming, well at least that is what … Click Here to Read More

Farmers will soon all be Disappeared

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UPDATE ADDED 6/26/26 I don’t think people are understanding the gravity of what is happening.  As the world is all caught up in the deceptions of the New World Order, they are not even seeing that everything the NWO is doing is designed to bring about YOUR DEATH AND DESTRUCTION.  The NWO wants you to … Click Here to Read More

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