Opinion Why we’ll end up eating bugs - "What the malcontents see as a conspiracy is just the market doing its thing" - yeah right

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Opinion

Why we’ll end up eating bugs​

The golden age of capitalism will emasculate us all​

BY PETER FRANKLIN

It’s that special time of year when the global elites gather together at Davos. Or rather it would be, if it weren’t for Covid. Thanks to the Omicron wave, the World Economic Forum 2022 has been postponed.

But don’t despair. Instead of the annual jamboree that you probably couldn’t afford and wouldn’t be invited to, there’s an online event called The Davos Agenda. This opened on Monday with a “special address” by Xi Jinping.

What could be more Davos than China’s communist dictator telling a bunch of virtual capitalists that we should “remove barriers, not erect walls”? Inspirational stuff — and I’m sure a great comfort to the people of Xinjiang, Hong Kong and Tibet.

For Davos-sceptics, however, this will only confirm suspicions that something has gone very wrong with global capitalism — with the World Economic Forum at the centre of it all. The fact that we’ve exported so much of our productive capacity to China and other countries is one concern. But the bigger worry is about what we’re getting back from the globalised economy.

For Westerners, capitalism is first and foremost a consumer experience. In the 20th century, the system triumphed over its socialist rival because it delivered the goods. After the long, dark centuries of scarcity, we suddenly found ourselves in a time of plenty. We were grateful — but not, let it be noted, pathetically grateful. Indeed, the real clincher for consumer capitalism is that it made us feel strong.

Motorised transport — above all the car — gave us the ability to go where we wanted, when we wanted. Combined with modern construction methods, our newfound mobility also massively expanded the supply of new housing. Space and privacy, previously reserved for the rich became available to the masses.

Then there was the food. Today, we romanticise the kitchen table as the heart of traditional family life. But in most homes it was also a traditional — and very necessary — instrument of rationing. Consumer capitalism transformed the situation. Above all, there was the miracle of meat every day, not just on special occasions; the modern world is defined as much by beef and pork as it is by steel and silicon.

Of course, abundance comes at a cost. There are the obvious downsides of excess; but also our growing distance from the old ways: the rhythms of nature, the bonds of community, the dignity of craftsmanship. Yet we didn’t sacrifice these deep connections in return for mere comfort. Rather, we were offered an alternative form of vitality: the freedom of the road; the mastery of owning one’s home; the visceral satisfaction of unrestricted carnivory. It might seem strange to describe these things as cultural goods, but within a certain set of consumerist values, that’s exactly what they are.

Beyond its merely material comforts, the consumer society — especially the American version — offered an empowered, independent and, dare I say it, manly way of life. Whether or not one approves, the fact is that it gave birth to a distinctive culture — one to which most of us remain attached.

Nonetheless, it’s now under threat. While the global economy produces more than ever, there’s a growing anxiety that the associated sense of empowerment — what could be called the red meat of capitalism — is about to be snatched away from us.

That’s literally the case when it comes to food. One only has to look at the effort being made to promote meat-substitutes. Most distastefully, there’s the argument that we should feed the world on insect protein. A quick search of the World Economic Forum website reveals an obsession with the idea. Here’s a small selection of articles from the last few years: “Worms for dinner? Europe backs insect based food”; “Good grub: why we might be eating insects soon”; and “Fancy a bug burger?”

The house journals of global capitalism, the Financial Times and The Economist, take a similar line. Both publications advocate for entomophagy beneath perky headlines such as “Eating bugs: a culinary idea with legs” and “Why eating insects makes sense”.

Yet a backlash is underway. “I will not eat the bugs!” has become a rallying cry on the alt — and not-so-alt — Right. The golden age of capitalism gave us affordable meat, and there’s a slice of public opinion that’s in no mood to accept substitutes.

We’re not just talking food here, but a whole way of life. Consider the second part of the anti-Davos mantra: “I will not live in the pod!” This refers to the proposition that we should radically rethink how we allocate living space in crowded, unaffordable cities. And by “rethink”, I mean “reduce” — both in terms of floor area and privacy. In place of apartments and houses, a WEF report invites us to consider “tiny homes” (i.e. boxes) and experiments in “shared living” (i.e. dormitories).

Then there is mobility. Never mind the “war on the motorist”, vehicle automation threatens to abolish the motorist. In the golden age of capitalism, people drove cars; but Davos looks forward to a future in which cars drive people.

It’s not difficult to see all this as a process of disempowerment — indeed of emasculation. I’m not surprised to see Right-wingers, especially in the US, leading the backlash. It’s as if some alien force has taken control of capitalism, pulling it in a new and unAmerican direction. I’m also not surprised to see the WEF — with its rhetoric around “The Great Reset” — become a symbol of this apparent change of course.

Yet, as much as I hate to admit it, Davos isn’t to blame. All of the trends that the Right-wingers see as threatening their kind of capitalism are in fact a consequence of it.

It’s a paradox of productivity. The greater the abundance of goods and services we produce, the greater the number of people who get to enjoy them. Unfortunately, it also means we use up more of the enabling resources that can’t be as easily multiplied. The most obvious example is the car, or rather the space required for cars. There was a time when the freedom of the road really meant something. But as roads fill up, there’s no choice but to impose speed limits, one-way systems, road charging and other measures required to save lives and keep cities moving. Self-driving cars, if and when we get them, are just the next step — a means of reducing driver error and thus making the most of limited road capacity. After all, that’s what free markets are supposed to do: maximise resource efficiency.

The same applies to living space. That too is limited, especially in city centres — and, therefore, we can expect the laws of supply and demand to have their inevitable impact. You may not want to live in a pod, but if that’s all you can afford, then you have a choice: either take the deal or move somewhere less expensive.

Eating the bugs is a yet another response to market forces. Meat is delicious, which is why demand for it is going up as more of the world’s people get rich enough to afford it. Supply responds to demand, but also pushes harder against natural limits — like the availability of land for feed crops. There are ethical concerns too — and so producers and consumers look for alternatives. If you see supermarkets filling their shelves with an ever wider range of meatless meat products, it’s not because someone at Davos told them to.

What the malcontents see as a conspiracy is just the market doing its thing. And Davos, when it comes down to it, is just a fancy trade fair for a global economy selling whatever it can at a competitive price.

Of course, that still leaves a lot of good reasons for rejecting the “Davos agenda” — but if you do, then you’re going to have to contemplate a rather more radical break with consumer capitalism. I don’t expect many takers. If the choice is between eating the bugs or eating only carrots, then most people will eat the bugs.
 
It is not like you will have a choice.

We are going towards ecological disaster, we are fucked. So that means arable land will be scares, food supply will be fucked and over all meat will be more expensive.
So either you pay a fuck ton of meat or you will eat bugs. Either way you are fucked.
If people accept their diet being replaced by bugs and soylent then that means it's fucking over. Throw in the towel, the creation of an eternal slave caste has been successfully created.
 
If people accept their diet being replaced by bugs and soylent then that means it's fucking over. Throw in the towel, the creation of an eternal slave caste has been successfully created.
Learn to hunt, become ungovernable. Butchering mammals is pretty transferable between species. Someone proficient could quarter an animal in the field for hiking out in about five minutes. A steer could feed a small family for a year. Military manuals for survival are great for traps. Improvised weapons manuals provide straightforward syntheses for things like gunpowder. Hit me up if you need help locating PDFs. Make them kill you if they intend to actually end this.
 
If people accept their diet being replaced by bugs and soylent then that means it's fucking over. Throw in the towel, the creation of an eternal slave caste has been successfully created.
It is either that or starve.

The oceans are acidifying, food supplies are already getting pushed and if it keeps going then raising beef will be expensive. How will you afford it?

Learn to hunt, become ungovernable. Butchering mammals is pretty transferable between species. Someone proficient could quarter an animal in the field for hiking out in about five minutes. A steer could feed a small family for a year. Military manuals for survival are great for traps. Improvised weapons manuals provide straightforward syntheses for things like gunpowder. Hit me up if you need help locating PDFs. Make them kill you if they intend to actually end this.

How are going to hunt shit in an environment that can not support large scale agriculture?.
 
It is either that or starve.

The oceans are acidifying, food supplies are already getting pushed and if it keeps going then raising beef will be expensive. How will you afford it?



How are going to hunt shit in an environment that can not support large scale agriculture?.
If we accept that it's just market forces we also need to recognize it will be centuries before "luxury" agriculture ceases to exist entirely. I'll sneak on the pastureland and kill a cow every year if burgers cost $100. Short of a nuclear holocaust, not even our grandchildren will live in an environment degraded beyond that point. I'll use bugs for chicken feed before eating them directly. Even in the worst environments that's usually possible.
 
They have no viable way to make it in quantity. It's all just little tech demos with mealworms and a slick marketing campaign.
That's a very important point I made in a post from a while ago:
It's a matter of calories gained versus effort/maintenance issue. Raw protein value doesn't matter when you need like 10k crickets to equal a steak. It's also why it's stupid as fuck for people to want it to become more common or even replace regular agriculture.

Hyperbole on the 10k, I think, but I believe you get the point. It's a lot harder to turn a field of grass into a shitload of edible insects than it is to just have a herd of cattle. As far as the taboo goes, it's because insects cause a natural disgust reaction, a lot of them. The places that don't have that mostly had a shitload of famines, and as common as you might think they'd be in the past they were much more common, much more recently, in the regions that don't have as much an issue with it.

I'll remind everyone here what was once turned into the breadbasket of Africa, in a century had the natives foraging for rats and insects again.
farming insects is fucking retarded and the concept that it'll somehow solve global warming because cow farts is insane. If anything humanity should be looking for a way to extract methane from farms to use as natural gas. No, I'm not making a joke, methane capture from cattle wouldn't be a half-bad idea as side benefit of agriculture.
Hit me up if you need help locating PDFs. Make them kill you if they intend to actually end this.
Put links to the pdfs in a post or something. If you store them locally try and upload them somewhere else or something.
 
Neither national socialism nor communism had us eat bugs.

Capitalism is really trying to prove all the antifags right, aren't they?

It makes sense. Bug burger costs much less to produce than the meat burger, so big companies will push it.

If we are going to live best Korea style, at least give us a funny cheese addict.
 
Eating the bugs is a great idea.

If you're a farmed salmon. Or a chicken, or a duck.

One of the big reasons fish farming is seen as unsustainable and wasteful is that you have to feed farmed fish an absolutely obscene amount of fish meal, meaning you have to get tons (literally) of small fish to feed the bigger fish, draining fisheries of the small fish that would normally feed non-farmed, wild fish.

Humans love eating bugs, as long as the bugs have been processed by one of the magical machines we call a vertebrate digestive system and turned into muscle tissue.

I have never understood why this is not seen as the primary use for cheap, abundant insect protein. Animal feed is a significant drain on resources, and animals don't care that much what they're eating, and have no disgust reaction about eating maggots or whatever else is on offer. Anyone who's ever kept fowl or fish knows that these animals think bugs are delicious, and that the protein they make via bug-eating is tasty to humans.
 
It is either that or starve.

The oceans are acidifying, food supplies are already getting pushed and if it keeps going then raising beef will be expensive. How will you afford it?



How are going to hunt shit in an environment that can not support large scale agriculture?.

None of this is actual resource depletion or us butting up against finite natural resources. It's manufactured by psycho greedy elites so they can steal more and enslave us. We afford it by killing toppling them all.
 
I will starve to death before I put any bugs, meat paste, or artificial chemcal cocktail you call real meat in my mouth. Fuck you journoscum pushing this and fuck the elitist scumbags financing this push so they can eat more steaks than they already do.
 
I will legit eat bug eaters before I eat the bugs.

Agreed, I will fucking strip down to nothing, put a fucking cow skull on my head, kill a soyboy with my bare hands, and eat his fucking face while howling at the moon, before I eat the bugs.
 
None of this is actual resource depletion or us butting up against finite natural resources. It's manufactured by psycho greedy elites so they can steal more and enslave us. We afford it by killing toppling them all.

No, just fucking say it.

We need to kill all the elites, they all have to hang, and there families must be thrown into vats of acid.

It is the only way to save us.
 
You're going to eat the bugs sooner or later and it's hilarious watching you kick and flail about it like autistic children who don't like their vegetables.
 
You're going to eat the bugs sooner or later and it's hilarious watching you kick and flail about it like autistic children who don't like their vegetables.

Great bait mate.

Now go back to your pod fuckboi.
 
Of course it will be “market forces.”

Bill Gates is already the biggest farmland owner in the US. He, Blackrock, and a few other of their (((wealthy friends))) will simply buy up the rest and then declare that they are no longer farming meat because muh ethics/climate change/cows are friends, not food/COVID/whatever.

But fear not, we’re switching to farming bugs! What are you going to do about it, bigot? Muh private company.
 
2806779-3fa285f4098229b811044b9392f44fe2.mp4
I will rustle cattle and butcher them myself before I eat bugs. Sorry ZOGbots.

Edit: just curious, are bugs kosher/halal?
“All fowls that creep, going upon all four, shall be an abomination unto you. Yet these may ye eat of every flying creeping thing that goeth upon all four, which have legs above their feet, to leap withal upon the earth; Even these of them ye may eat; the locust after his kind, and the bald locust after his kind, and the beetle after his kind, and the grasshopper after his kind. But all other flying creeping things, which have four feet, shall be an abomination unto you.” Leviticus 11:20-23
“And every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth shall be an abomination; it shall not be eaten. Whatsoever goeth upon the belly, and whatsoever goeth upon all four, or whatsoever hath more feet among all creeping things that creep upon the earth, them ye shall not eat; for they are an abomination. Ye shall not make yourselves abominable with any creeping thing that creepeth, neither shall ye make yourselves unclean with them, that ye should be defiled thereby.” Leviticus 11:41-43
 
None of this is actual resource depletion or us butting up against finite natural resources. It's manufactured by psycho greedy elites so they can steal more and enslave us. We afford it by killing toppling them all.

How the fuck are you going to do that.
Either way you vote the elites already control both sides.

Let's face it if you ever took to the streets you would give up at the first sign of rain or a bit of resistance.
 
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