5 Technologies That 5 Billion Will Use by 2050
Possibly changing the way we live just as profoundly as the internet did.
Possibly changing the way we live just as profoundly as the internet did.
Thanks to globalization, we plebes can pay just $6.49 for a whole Whopper meal fit for a 16th-century king.
Warning diners that red meat is bad for the environment is yet another attempt to socially engineer food choices.
Regulators are beginning to smile on the sci-fi project of creating real meat products without the typical death and environmental destruction.
Until next year's, because capitalism is always making things better.
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With government meddling, many farmers end up doing less with more, and people end up paying more for less.
The G Word, a new documentary, only occasionally covers serious issues. But it opts not to do honest reporting.
Real factories are beginning to replace factory farms.
Consumer trends suggest a meatless near future is increasingly unlikely.
More choice can decrease meat consumption without coercion of regressive taxation.
The president can't fix a problem he doesn't understand.
Is America's meat processing industry making huge profits by "jacking up prices" during a pandemic, or does it need government assistance? Both, according to the Biden administration.
The beef checkoff problem raises prices without benefiting ranchers
Talk of a ban follows declining popularity of dog as a restaurant dish.
Warning people about the dangers of raw meat doesn't require prohibiting the practice.
The process uses 99 percent less land and 96 percent less freshwater than traditional meat production.
COVID-19 has exposed the problems of a centralized food supply and built momentum for sweeping deregulation of the meat industry.
Turns out that basing animal rights policy on the strong feelings of animal rights activists is not working out so well for the animals themselves.
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And produced with a much lower environmental footprint
Cell-based meat cultivation is on its way.
America's meat supply has been hammered by COVID-19 outbreaks at many of the nation's largest meat processing plants, but Congress can solve this by reducing onerous regulations.
Three bills are on the table, but only one of them promises to unshackle small and independent ranchers.
Anti-competitive regulations have made Americans far too reliant on mega meat processors. It's time to level the playing field.
A renewed push to pass the PRIME Act picks up steam as COVID-19 leaves us all asking “Where’s the beef?”
When it comes to the food economy, government should remember that workers and consumers call the shots.
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Impossible Foods says that animal agriculture is a leading cause of climate change. Instead of trying to pass laws to ban meat, it's providing tasty, plant-based alternatives.
Eating meat doesn't have as big of an impact on the environment as you've been told.
Nobody is being "confused" by vegetarian meat substitutes.
Going vegetarian would reduce a person's greenhouse gas emissions by around 2 percent
Listen to journalist Nina Teicholz face off against David L. Katz, MD, the founding director of the Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center, at an event in New York City.
Watch journalist Nina Teicholz face off against David L. Katz, MD, the founding director of the Yale-Griffin Prevention Research Center, at an event in New York City.
A regulatory pact between FDA and USDA may help speed up getting lab-grown meats to your local supermarket.
A state law says you can't call it meat unless it's actually beef, pork, or poultry. Critics say the bill violates the First Amendment.
Fear mongering over ingredients derived from genetically modified yeast
Nevertheless, U.S. cancer rates are stable for women and declining for men.
Federal legislation may be the only solution to overreaching state laws.
The U.S. Cattlemen's Association petitioned the USDA to declare that "meat" and "beef" exclude products not "slaughtered in the traditional manner."
"Meat is meat, not a science project."
Tasty Impossible Burger uses 95 percent less land, uses 74 percent less water, and emits 87 percent less greenhouse gas.