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by QML
2667 days ago
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I've never heard of meat substitutes being "marketed ideologically as something that will help reduce economic inequality"—that's such an odd argument to make. What I have heard before is:
- more resource-efficient and green since livestock farming requires a lot of feed and has a higher carbon footprint than all vehicles combined, and
- that it's less cruel than raising animals to be slaughtered. In terms of economics, a cheaper meat substitute would just mean a cheaper source of protein for people, comparable to eating vegetables. As a side note, does anyone know why Paul Graham has been talking about economic inequality recently? Is it just politics season and that this is a debate issue? |
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Back in January of 2016, in the aftermath of the occupy movement and the height of the US presidential campaign, he penned this essay as a sort of "defense" of inequality:
http://www.paulgraham.com/ineq.html
We're ramping back up to another presidential election, the concerns about inequality have only gotten greater, and for the first time, mass transformation of dietary habits via technology as a way to combat climate change has gone from a niche to a national topic.