·  News ·  Travel ·  Food ·  Arts ·  Science ·  Sports ·  Advice ·  Religion ·  Life ·  Greensboro · 

Synthetic Meat

by Liv | Published on October 26th, 2006, 8:39 am | Food
I almost forgot about this. It was one of those weird things I discovered last night surfing the Internet. Did you know that they can produce meat in the laboratory? Seriously who would have thunk it?

Well after hearing about this phenomenon I looked it up on Wiki.

In vitro meat, also known as laboratory-grown meat, is animal flesh that has never been part of a complete, living animal.


So this begged two questions from me. One would I eat it? Would you? and Two, is there a moral dilemma in bypassing the natural process of birth?

McDonald's: May I take Your order?
Me: I'd like one burger with vat meat, please.
 
 
Just look at all the needless pain and death that would end. No more slaughter houses processing steaks and veal for your local Food Lion.
Life is 10% what happens to you and 90% how you "choose" to respond to it.

SouthernFriedInfidel wrote: If you believe things that are contradicted by the evidence, then you are on a path built on falsehoods.
October 26th, 2006, 10:12 am
User avatar
RebelSnake
 
Location: Greensboro
I think I'm for it except I think It would play mind games on me, wondering if they screwed up the genetic code just slightly and I'm eating something like human flesh.
October 26th, 2006, 10:33 am
User avatar
Liv
I show you something fantastic and you find fault.
 
Location: Greensboro, NC
There is another type of meat that you can eat that does not require the harming of any animal? Do you know what it is?
All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second,it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident.

Ephesians 2:8-9 For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast.
October 26th, 2006, 3:39 pm
User avatar
BecauseHeLives
 
Christians are such cannibals!!!
October 26th, 2006, 5:40 pm
User avatar
Liv
I show you something fantastic and you find fault.
 
Location: Greensboro, NC
LOL... I look back at my post and just realized that my post could be interpreted as sexually oriented. I did not mean it that way.

:shock:
October 26th, 2006, 5:59 pm
User avatar
BecauseHeLives
 
I have to wonder why it is that consumers in a moderately-educated society would be uneasy about using such things. I mean, you'd expect that any genetic manipulation would be checked for harmful properties before leaving the lab, wouldn't you?
December 26th, 2006, 1:34 pm
User avatar
SouthernFriedInfidel
 
Location: 5th circle of hell -- actually not very crowded at the moment.
I think it's the whole "messing with what God didn't create" thing...
December 26th, 2006, 1:50 pm
User avatar
Liv
I show you something fantastic and you find fault.
 
Location: Greensboro, NC
Liv wrote:I think it's the whole "messing with what God didn't create" thing...

I kind of wonder. You know, we hear all sorts of weird stories of what scientists can do with plants and animals when they start splicing genes. I bet a lot of those stories are started without any real basis in fact.

But I think that if a plant can be changed so that it becomes poisonous to bugs, it sure as heck can be changed to be poisonous to humans. Which is where the FDA should come into play. The question is: are government regulators able to correctly and effectively handle the problems this technology can lead to?

I sure hope that religion-based superstitions don't come into play on this question. Because I think that a plant that can be made far more beneficial to us -- and kept from having any unmanageable side effects -- would be a huge plus. We don't need some whack-job to stand in the way saying "If God didn't make peanuts this way, I won't let you try this!"
December 26th, 2006, 2:05 pm
User avatar
SouthernFriedInfidel
 
Location: 5th circle of hell -- actually not very crowded at the moment.
I guess the big fear is how stable are the genetic modifications? Will everytime the peanut convert to a giant peanut, or does the probability exist in the genetic modifications for the occasional mutation that might create, oh say a plastic peanut?
December 26th, 2006, 2:57 pm
User avatar
Liv
I show you something fantastic and you find fault.
 
Location: Greensboro, NC
Liv wrote:I guess the big fear is how stable are the genetic modifications? Will everytime the peanut convert to a giant peanut, or does the probability exist in the genetic modifications for the occasional mutation that might create, oh say a plastic peanut?

It should be reasonable to expect engineered peanuts to mutate at the same rate that natural ones do. It would be a good question to explore, though.
December 26th, 2006, 3:09 pm
User avatar
SouthernFriedInfidel
 
Location: 5th circle of hell -- actually not very crowded at the moment.

Return to Food