CBS segment highlights how adding bugs to the food system 'could be a game-changer' to fight climate change - I WILL NOT EAT THE BUGS I WILL NOT EAT THE BUGS

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"CBS Saturday Morning" featured a segment suggesting adding insects into a diet could provide benefits for a growing world affected by climate change.

To counter meat, soybean derived proteins or other high-carbon foods, the segment described efforts by climate experts and scientists to explore farming bugs to protect the planet.

"We all know how important insects are for the environment, but climate researchers say bugs could be a game changer in the fight to protect the planet in ways you may not have imagined," host Dana Jacobson said.

Reporter Tina Kraus explained, "Adding some insects to the mix is customary in the kitchen in some parts of the world. Now climate experts think the protein-packed pests could offer a real solution to the global food crisis. Scientists in Germany are not pushing to get the critters your plate, they see another benefit."

One scientist interviewed said their intention is not to force bugs onto menus but be used as an alternative for animal feed.

"To have a more sustainable production of proteins, we need this and I see insects as a perfect tool," the scientist argued. "And you can make so many things out of insects, and to make the world better."

Kraus explained that this development is a reaction to the "large-scale growth of soybeans" that has been "blamed for extensive deforestation" while farming bugs require less food and water to sustain.

"It's estimated up to 1.2 trillion insects are raised on farms each year as companies race to find a high-protein, low-carbon solution to feed animals and the world's population," Kraus stated.

Jacobson concluded, "And with insect farming booming around the world, researchers are busy as bees looking for more climate-friendly fixes."

Climate change activists including global leaders and celebrities have advocated for people to incorporate bugs into their daily diets as a way to sustain the planet. According to a recent study from Michigan State University, many bugs, contrary to earlier prediction models, are expected to survive and even thrive in warmer climates.

However, this push to push people to eat bugs has met fierce opposition in the United States. In March, a Utah school teacher was caught on video insisting to her students that eating bugs is a necessity to help the environment.

We don't want to eat bugs and it's gross. But should we be eating bugs? Yeah, because we're killing the world by raising cows and animals. So we need to, not get rid of cows, but like, try to balance our diet so that not so much of our land is being used to raise cows, cause it's killing the Ozone layer," the teacher said. "All the evidence has suggested, that we probably should be eating bugs – it's good for the environment, etc. But I didn't know that that was an offensive topic to indicate."
 
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hasn't this been a recurring thing since like 2014? why are there still articles about it?
 
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Depends on the bug and how it's prepared. Dried mealworms and crickets aren't bad, and if I'm ever in Mexico with a shitton of money I want to try all the expensive regional delicacy bugs like escamoles and maguey worms.
I hate to tell you this, bro, but you ain't gonna get traditional insect dishes from what's coming. Think nutripaste.
Also I question why they believe insects are the answer. I already buy mealworms to mix with my chicken feed. That shit ain't cheap.
 
Sorry, don't give enough of a fuck when capitalists have the boot on my neck and are doing whatever the fuck they want.

By the by, this has nothing to do with climate change. A prime motivator for the rich is that they believe people other than them are too happy. That the poor have access to too many things of wealth and that none of you should ever be able to eat a steak because they do, because they're above you.

This is the nature of the capitalist.
 
Let the chickens eat the bugs. Bugs are not any major part of our diets.
The major lesson that should have been learned from BSE is that grinding up an animal that you don’t normally eat and adding it to the food chain is a bad idea.
We certainly do need to be more sustainable. Could we perhaps focus on locally grown and prepped foods, that work with good husbandry and farming to keep air, water and soil in good condition, rather than mega hives and nutrient paste down the Taurian shelter?
 
Let the chickens eat the bugs. Bugs are not any major part of our diets.
The major lesson that should have been learned from BSE is that grinding up an animal that you don’t normally eat and adding it to the food chain is a bad idea.
We certainly do need to be more sustainable. Could we perhaps focus on locally grown and prepped foods, that work with good husbandry and farming to keep air, water and soil in good condition, rather than mega hives and nutrient paste down the Taurian shelter?
Considering how many of the wealthy are fucktarded Malthusians, introduced, unknown zoonotic diseases from insect populations would be a plus for them and not a minus.

But yeah, the amount of unknown parasitic and zoonotic diseases as well as the simple unpalatable and disgusting nature are enough to turn anyone off. Oh, and as a scientist, you know there's typically a very good reason we find something disgusting. To prevent us from getting sick.

Also the climate cost of food vs. the wealthy creating complete unsustainability from planned obselence is almost fucking laughable. I'll stop eating meat when they'll design products that last more than 5 years. So the answer is never.
 
Oh, and as a scientist, you know there's typically a very good reason we find something disgusting. To prevent us from getting sick.
So many drives at the moment to get us to ignore that behavioural immune system, aren’t there? You will eat the bugs. You will love the gays and the trannies. You will not object to men in your toilets and changing rooms. You will not object to foreign cultures mutilating children and honour killing women. You will ignore the instincts that have kept thousands of generations before you alive and you will obey us.
Amen to the planned obsolescence. My mother has a clothes drier she’s had for twenty two years now. I seem to have to replace mine every few. Nothing lasts, I hate it. It’s like everything has to be in constant flux to keep you discombobulated
 
Keep this up and I'll add long pig to my diet. See if I don't.
Its not so bad tbh

OrangeJuliusEvola said:
I hate to tell you this, bro, but you ain't gonna get traditional insect dishes from what's coming. Think nutripaste.
Also I question why they believe insects are the answer. I already buy mealworms to mix with my chicken feed. That shit ain't cheap.
You'd think the government would have enough sense to remember that if theres one historical truth its that when you fuck with the peoples food supply you piss them off enough to overthrow you. Trying to legit force people into eating bugs won't end the way they think it will. Its a good way to push people into stringing you up a lamp post

That aside, none of these people seem to bother to work out just how difficult even providing enough bugs to even remotely attempt something like this would actually be. If anything it would cost more resources than the existing food supply. Most bugs aren't exactly a nutrient rich source of food when it comes to the resources put into them. One cow can feed alot of people. Feeding the same amount of people that one cow does would take a shit ton of bugs and everything going into producing those bugs, to say nothing of how much harder it would be to effectively process them and all the waste products they'd produce. They also seem to forget that animals are used in their entirety and for a huge amount of things in multiple industries in ways bugs cannot be. They would be fucking those industries up as well
 
They've talked about this for 10 years, yet people still don't want to make bugs part of their regular diet. It's seriously time to stop. I want to eat a cow or a pig, I don't want to eat bugs, laboratory meat, or heavily processed soy beans. Most normal people don't want to. It's really time to stop pushing for all these weird meat alternatives.
 
So many drives at the moment to get us to ignore that behavioural immune system, aren’t there? You will eat the bugs. You will love the gays and the trannies. You will not object to men in your toilets and changing rooms. You will not object to foreign cultures mutilating children and honour killing women. You will ignore the instincts that have kept thousands of generations before you alive and you will obey us.
Amen to the planned obsolescence. My mother has a clothes drier she’s had for twenty two years now. I seem to have to replace mine every few. Nothing lasts, I hate it. It’s like everything has to be in constant flux to keep you discombobulated
To be controlled and to be shut down, instincts are seen as primitive.

And yeah, planned obselesence is insane. They produce lightbulbs that last forever in Dubai, simply by undervolting the LEDs. The LEDs in our lights are overvolted so they're designed to burn out, which creates tons of e-waste. The same with devices that are designed to be replaced within a year. The amount of pollution and waste they cause is not even remotely equivalent to food waste.
Its not so bad tbh


You'd think the government would have enough sense to remember that if theres one historical truth its that when you fuck with the peoples food supply you piss them off enough to overthrow you. Trying to legit force people into eating bugs won't end the way they think it will. Its a good way to push people into stringing you up a lamp post

That aside, none of these people seem to bother to work out just how difficult even providing enough bugs to even remotely attempt something like this would actually be. If anything it would cost more resources than the existing food supply. Most bugs aren't exactly a nutrient rich source of food when it comes to the resources put into them. One cow can feed alot of people. Feeding the same amount of people that one cow does would take a shit ton of bugs and everything going into producing those bugs, to say nothing of how much harder it would be to effectively process them and all the waste products they'd produce. They also seem to forget that animals are used in their entirety and for a huge amount of things in multiple industries in ways bugs cannot be. They would be fucking those industries up as well
The funny part is that Hannibal itself was allowed to continue because the market for the show was EXTREMELY wealthy people. It was kind of insane. The people we're talking about were obsessed with Hannibal and allowed that show to air even when the dude running it had no fucking clue what he was doing.
 
climate experts
Fuck...off.
Let the chickens eat the bugs. Bugs are not any major part of our diets.
The major lesson that should have been learned from BSE is that grinding up an animal that you don’t normally eat and adding it to the food chain is a bad idea.
We certainly do need to be more sustainable. Could we perhaps focus on locally grown and prepped foods, that work with good husbandry and farming to keep air, water and soil in good condition, rather than mega hives and nutrient paste down the Taurian shelter?
Good stewardship does not promote government control the way destroying food production and forcing a shift to bugs does.
 
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