These transformations are tied to the changing American diet. Since the early 1980s, America’s per-person cheese consumption has doubled, largely in the form of mozzarella-covered pizza pies. And last year, for the first time, the average American ate 100 pounds of chicken, twice the amount 40 years ago.

  • @TurboDiesel
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    2511 months ago

    We need to take a whole-cloth look at how agribusiness operates. Why is there so much outrage over resources we’re using to farm chicken, which as you pointed out are lower calorie-for-calorie than beef, but crickets for the resources we’re wasting on growing alfalfa in Arizona.

    • @GraniteM
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      411 months ago

      Also, start eating crickets! They’re a great source of protein!

      • prole
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        111 months ago

        In b4 the pushback from the Fox News crowd…

        Oh. No, wait. It appears as though I’m too late.

      • @[email protected]
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        -411 months ago

        No, that sounds disgusting!

        I don’t know where this push for eating bugs came from, it’s not a valid solution

        • @[email protected]
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          111 months ago

          It is valid, it’s just not realistic. Bugs are incredible nutritious, but people also don’t like the idea of eating them. Not to mention vegetarians, who likely won’t eat bugs either.

          The real messaging here should be on reducing meat consumption, which will also improve health generally.

          • @Zron
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            111 months ago

            And I’m sure in a hundred years there will be an article about some vital resource that is being wasted by mass farming crickets.

            It’s almost like the ecosystem is not capable of sustaining 8 billion people over any serious time spans.

            Our plant based foods are less nutritious than before because we’re leeching nutrients out of the soil we grow them in. Our meat products are also going to be less nutritious because the meat is grown on animals that eat plants we farm. And the meat requires vast amounts of fresh water.

            The earth never had the resources to sustain our society. We just never stopped to think about it.

            • @[email protected]
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              211 months ago

              A lot of our problems lie with food distribution, not production, and poor use of water. We could support a larger population if we fix both.

              plant based foods are less nutritious

              That’s only somewhat true. We’ve basically prioritized quantity (and pest resistance) over quality, and foods are still quite nutritious. If you eat a varied diet, you should get plenty of nutrition even with the worst of it.

              meat products… less nutritious

              Maybe in ways that don’t really matter. Beef, for example, is produced from non-nutritious source foods, like grass, cows are just good at extracting what little nutrition they have. We don’t eat meat for the micronutrients, we eat it for proteins and fats, and fill in the rest with plant based foods. Chicken and pork will have a bigger impact since they actually eat foods we grow, but even then we don’t generally expect micronutrients from meats.

              Meat requiring large amounts of water is the real problem here. If we significantly reduce the amount of meat we produce, we’ll have lots of water to allocate toward more nutritious plant based foods.

              The earth never had the resources

              That’s some BS the eco people spread to scare people into being more eco friendly. The Earth absolutely has the resources to sustain our population and beyond, we just really suck at managing it. If we can switch energy and food production to be more efficient and convert business and residential areas to use less water and electricity, we’ll have plenty for even higher population numbers. But we need to make the step.