I’m naturally quite cautious about things like this, but I’m curious to hear your thoughts.

You are viewing a single thread.
View all comments View context
14 points

Did you read the article? It’s about splicing the DNA snippets that produce umami proteins onto plants.

permalink
report
parent
reply
7 points
*

I did. The article is riddled with blind support for plant based capitalism and suggests using the tech to improve existing meat products. I also read a little about moolec, which itself grew out of is quite cozy with the pork industry. Finally, where are they getting the DNA subsequences? Is such a company going to build a small library of DNA and then never grow/purchase new pigs to deconstruct to catalog taste, texture, and genetic material?

Soybeans are good, and they don’t need to taste or feel like pigs for people to enjoy them.

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points

It’s Wired: of course it’s going to be riddled with blind support for capitalism.

Finally, where are they getting the DNA subsequences?

From the industrial scale pig torture infrastructure that was already here.

Soybeans are good, and they don’t need to taste or feel like pigs for people to enjoy them.

Scolding people into eating their beans has been going great so far.

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points
*

From the industrial scale pig torture infrastructure that was already here.

That’s exactly my point.

Scolding people into eating their beans has been going great so far.

Stating that we don’t need to grow animal proteins inside plants for beans to be good is not the same thing as scolding people for not eating their beans.

All I’m trying to say is that I think we shouldn’t be growing or using the meat industries to develop alternatives to animal products, and I am quite confident that there is more profit to be made for moolec if they continue trading with meat processors (both to acquire new animals for testing and dna extraction, and also in supplying meat processors with cheaper protein) than if they were to immediately halt any further development that depends on growing or harvesting new animals and only grow or sell from seed stock they’ve developed so far.

permalink
report
parent
reply
5 points

From the industrial scale pig torture infrastructure that was already here.

That’s not vegan, did you get lost?

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

Chinese people have been making plant based umami tofu since before fictional Jesus Christ was around

There’s literally no reason to bring a pig into it when you could just use mushrooms or something else for umami flavor

Crackkkers trying to reinvent the soy wheel, badly, with more animal cruelty

permalink
report
parent
reply

vegan

!vegan@hexbear.net

Create post

:vegan-liberation:

Welcome to /c/vegan and congratulations on your first steps toward overcoming liberalism and ascending to true leftist moral superiority.

Rules

  • No plant-based diet bullshit or promotion of plant-based capitalism. Veganism isn’t about you, it’s about historical materialist anti-speciesism, anti-racist animalization, and animal liberation. Ethical vegans only.
  • No omni apologists or carnists. Babystepping is for libs, and we’re not here to pat you on the back. Good faith questions and debate about how to fight for animal liberation are allowed.
  • No advocating violence to any species for any reason. If you think this is negotiable GTFO. This includes but is not limited to animal testing, slaughter, and mass euthanasia. Anything that promotes speciesism or the commodification of animals will be removed.
  • Use Content Warnings and NSFW tags for triggering content. Especially if a comrade requests it.
  • Questions about diet belong in c/food. It’s also a great place to share recipes.
  • In all sections of the site, you must follow the Hexbear.net Code of Conduct.

Resources

Animal liberation and direct action

Read theory, libs

Vegan 101 & FAQs

If you have any great resources or theory you think belong in this sidebar, please message one of the comm's mods

Take B12. :vegan-edge:

Community stats

  • 621

    Monthly active users

  • 249

    Posts

  • 1.4K

    Comments