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douglas9

(4,358 posts)
Mon Oct 25, 2021, 08:17 AM Oct 2021

Cultivated Meat and the Prayer of Saint Francis

When my mother went to England two decades ago, she came back with a framed illustration of the Prayer of Saint Francis, which still hangs in her kitchen. It’s a beautiful painting by the Scottish artist Alison Merry. I hadn’t put much thought into the words until recently, when I began my own spiritual journey.

While the passage is frequently attributed to Saint Francis of Assisi, it actually appears to have been written by an anonymous author in the lead-up to the First World War. The misunderstanding can be traced back to a mass-produced prayer card featuring an image of the Italian friar with the relevant text.

Whoever wrote it, the passage offers a great deal of timeless wisdom in a small number of densely-packed lines. The opening is particularly important: “Lord, make me an instrument of your peace.” As someone who cares about our treatment of animals, especially those we use for food, I’ve thought about this quite a bit in recent months.

In the current moment, I don’t think there’s a more effective way to be an instrument of peace than pushing for federal funding for cultivated-meat research. For those who don’t know, cultivated meat is grown from animal cells, without slaughter. It has the potential to relegate so much violence to the history books.

https://www.counterpunch.org/2021/10/25/cultivated-meat-and-the-prayer-of-saint-francis/

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Cultivated Meat and the Prayer of Saint Francis (Original Post) douglas9 Oct 2021 OP
More... JudyM Oct 2021 #1
This message was self-deleted by its author jfz9580m Oct 2021 #2
K & R Duppers Oct 2021 #3

JudyM

(29,225 posts)
1. More...
Mon Oct 25, 2021, 09:52 AM
Oct 2021
In addition to animal-welfare benefits, cultivated meat is better for the environment and public health. It requires a fraction of the greenhouse-gas emissions to produce that raising livestock does. Since animals are removed from the process, the risk of zoonotic viruses making the jump to humans is eliminated.

I was happy to learn the U.S. Department of Agriculture is giving $10 million over five years to Tufts University, which will establish a National Institute for Cellular Agriculture. The institute will conduct open-access research into cultivated meat. This will hopefully address ongoing challenges, such as reaching price parity with slaughtered meat.

This is wonderful news and a great start. But given the technology’s potential to reduce animal suffering — in addition to greenhouse-gas emissions, and pandemic risk — the government should be allocating billions of dollars to the effort, not millions. All those seeking to be instruments of peace should push legislators to increase funding.

Of course, there are many ways to be an instrument of peace. However, in this period of history, I don’t think any is more effective than pressuring lawmakers for further investment in cellular-agriculture development. We can move towards a slaughter-free America, and, eventually, a slaughter-free world, with all the good that entails.




Rapid progress and adoption could make an enormous difference in our climate situation, in addition to minimizing the number of suffering factory-farmed animals.
Thanks for posting this!

Response to douglas9 (Original post)

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