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Erzesel
2 years ago

The world has no hunger problem, but a poverty problem.

As far as the insect protein is concerned, the mass breeding of certain insects, for the extraction of food, would call for even more unthinkable problems.

The “user insects” would be bred in “monoculture”

As we already know from other breeding “followings”, the production and maintenance of breeds requires enormous care. This applies to all originally natural resources that the human being has taken into his hands.

Insects also have natural enemies and diseases (probably more known than before). The only “domestized” insect, the honey bee, has for many decades been cramping mushrooms, mites and various other problems, which can only be mastered by extreme use of “Chemie”.

It is not that flourworms etc. would be bred under almost clinical conditions, but everyone would want to cut a slice of the profit cake. ….With corresponding “wild growth”. 🥵

One imagines the outbreak of a breeding variant of fraßinsekten…. or their “fines”. The Biblical Plages would be just a cheap version of what we are about to do.😱 Submersible Enrichment

There are good reasons why evolution has equipped us (and other “grand animals” with Ekel/Aversion against various “small animals”. …just on the edge…

Many of the economists seem to have lost sight of the seemingly awesome source of protein.

Doesn’t anyone come up with the question why in tens of thousands of years of cultural history no one should have come up with the idea of raising fat protein-rich grubs?

…and again, man sends himself over the “whiteness” of nature…

…which bushes may have interpreted “Pandora”?

Instead of doing something against poverty, overpopulation, uneducatedness, we do the wrong thing again. We provide even more “imbalance”. We develop even more cheap food sources for even more hungry mauls.

Ok… the latter thesis sounds pretty messy…😏😤

RonaId
2 years ago

Not more. The most effective is the soldier’s plane. Your larvae get everything that highly-civilized peoples throw away. Old bakery products, pressure residues in juice extraction, etc.

There, where hunger reigns, no one would feed a kilo of old bread to grow from it about 300 grams of madene that weigh even less.

Josie258
2 years ago

The real problem is not the food shortage, but the redistribution!

It is estimated that about 1.3 billion tons of food are thrown away annually!

Food waste: figures, data and facts (wien.gv.at)

Ramon6134
2 years ago

It wouldn’t be necessary. The world hunger is one of the problems you could solve most easily

grossefrau681
2 years ago

We have no world hunger – we have a problem with greed and carelessness.

CleverRemo
2 years ago

No, because Gier is insatiable