Neither do I (see much difference between shrimp and crickets), and shrimp gross me out too.  But if you like shrimp, or crickets, you're welcome to eat them, of your own free will.  A little over 1/4 of the people in the world eat bugs right now, and they're welcome to keep doing so if they choose.

What I'm objecting to is the apparent public relations campaign to attempt to convince people to eat bugs, not for their own good, not for the good of hungry people elsewhere, but for the good of the Oligarchy. 

If you consider bugs to be Dirt, as Muslims and Jews consider pork to be Dirt, then you shouldn't be obligated to eat them.  It's about the right to not have your existing cultural ways (not to mention your puke-reflex) overridden for someone else's financial gain.

As far as the Oligarchy is concerned, you are a machine that makes money for them.  No different to a piece of equipment in a factory, or a tractor in a field.  And as far as the Oligarchy is concerned, paying you one cent more per hour than it takes to keep you alive-enough to come in to work every day, is as wasteful as a poorly-tuned engine that guzzles fuel. 

So along comes a cheaper source of fuel: of course they'll want to put that in their machines.

And along comes a cheaper source of protein: of course they'll want to put that in their humans.

And they'll do what it takes to convince you to _like it_, including imposing it by the coercive force of economics.  How often do you hear people say "I can't afford to eat XYZ (organically produced food)"...?  See how that works?  It's already happening all around us:

Milk that's produced with RBST, meat that's saturated with antibiotics to fatten it up faster (and leads to drug-resistant bacteria), factory farmed in unsanitary conditions (we never had mass e-coli outbreaks when I was a kid), gene-spliced vegetables that thrive on pesticides, even soda that's not sweetened with sugar but with HFCS that causes obesity.  All of that crap is cheaper, and that's why it's on the menu for the working masses. 

Bugs come next.  Mark my words.  Unless we get cheap veggie-meat first.  Or unless we straight-up revolt against the Oligarchy.

-G.


=====



On 13-05-16-Thu 8:32 AM, Steve Berl wrote:
Personally I don't see that much difference between eating a shrimp and eating a cricket. 

Steve

On Thursday, May 16, 2013, Romy Ilano wrote:
Investors in veggie meat are not altruistic angels anymore. It's drawing plenty of main stream interest

---

Romy Ilano
Founder of Snowyla
http://www.snowyla.com
romy@snowyla.com

On May 15, 2013, at 17:31, GtwoG PublicOhOne <g2g-public01@att.net> wrote:

>
>
>
> For the second day in a row, the BBC runs an article promoting the
> virtues of eating bugs, this time on their Travel blog:
>
> http://www.bbc.com/travel/blog/20130513-is-crawly-cuisine-the-future
>
> Pictured is a handful of moth larvae grubs found in Australia: plump
> translucent white squirmy things that look like hairless caterpillars or
> overgrown maggots. The caption says that they are "...said to have a
> crispy skin with a yellow 'eggy' centre when roasted."
>
> Mmm-mmm-good, right?
>
> The article goes on to say, "According to the UN report, 'consumer
> disgust' remains a large barrier in many Western countries – but for
> some two billion people across the world, eating insects is really no
> big deal."
>
> Unsaid: five billion people in the world right now don't eat bugs.
> Though, the Beeb does get credit for mentioning "consumer disgust," also
> known as the vomit-reflex, even if only as a "barrier," with the
> implication that it's something to be overcome, like the desire for
> freedom & privacy.
>
> As I mentioned yesterday, there are plenty of other solutions to feeding
> a world that's overpopulated by a factor of two and overconsuming beyond
> any sustainable limit. One of them is veggie-meat: vegetable matter
> that's cooked up to be almost identical to the meat we already eat.
>
> For this we turn to another regular source of Dystopian News, namely
> Wired magazine. Yes, "real geeks don't read Wired," but Wired is
> actually a good place to keep your finger on the pulse of the corporate
> oligarchy and the promoters of the computer-as-God religion.
> Occasionally they run something that's actually good news, such as the
> following:
>
> http://www.wired.com/business/2013/05/future-meat/
>
> Beyond Meat is a new company that produces veggie-meat that's a drop-in
> replacement for chicken in many recipes. They share the market with
> other companies such as Tofurkey and Boca Burgers. At present most of
> these products are found in the Vegan aisle in supermarkets, but the
> goal of these companies is to put them right next to the meat products
> in the meat section.
>
> Veggie-meat tastes good and has great potential to stretch the world's
> food supply. Unlike the moth grubs pictured in the Beeb article, it's
> something you'd choose to eat and enjoy eating.
>
> So far the oligarchy is ignoring veggie-meat. Funding for veggie-meat
> companies typically comes from "angel investors" who consider themselves
> rebels and often have altruistic motives alongside the profit motive.
>
> The oligarchy's mission, should you choose to acquiesce, is to make you
> submit. Eating bugs is not about preventing hunger, it's about cultural
> shock & awe: getting you to do something that grosses you out and makes
> you want to throw up, the easier to get you to submit to other
> depredations over time.
>
> But as Beyond Meat shows, you don't have to submit, as long as you're
> willing to think for yourself, and exercise your own free will.
>
> -G.
>
>
> =====
>
>
>
> On 13-05-14-Tue 12:07 AM, GtwoG PublicOhOne wrote:
>>
>> YOs-
>>
>> The oligarchy has its own vision of the World of Tomorrow, and the world
>> they're preparing for us to live in whether we like it or not.  I'll be
>> writing occasional pieces about items in the news, to point out what's
>> behind the chirpy spin.  This is the first of many.  Fasten your seat
>> belts and keep a barf bag handy.
>>
>> -G.
>>
>>
>> Let Them Eat Bugs.
>>
>> The United Nations today released a report that touted the benefits of
>> eating insects as a solution to world hunger.
>> http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-22508439
>>
>> Hint: it's not really about hunger, it's about making you sub


--
-steve