WaPo Says Americans Should Consider Crickets for Thanksgiving Dinner, Ditching Turkey for Lab-Grown Meat
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An article in The Washington Post Wednesday argued that climate change could result in replacing Thanksgiving staples with lab grown meat, plant-based meat alternatives and crickets.
Hot summers, wildfires, droughts and flooding could damage American agriculture and make seasonal favorites like pumpkins and turkey hard to come by, according to the articleโs authors.
The piece explained that weather events are already forcing farmers to relocate certain crops: southerners are moving their turkeys northward due to hurricane risks, and warm weather in the Northeast is making cranberry crops more vulnerable.
While climate change affects agriculture, according to the article, agriculture also perpetuates climate change. โAgriculture is responsible for up to 30 percent of global greenhouse-gas emissions and 70 percent of freshwater use,โ the authors reported.
Opinion: Environmentalists make good movie villains because they want to make your real life worse, @SonnyBunch writes https://t.co/JDCfxfDwTk
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) January 3, 2019
To combat this, the article encourages readers to โconsider crickets in your crust,โ arguing that insects such as weevils, crickets and grasshoppers are high in protein and other nutrients and low in emissions.
Insect snacks have become a popular novelty in the U.S. in recent years. Attendees at Seattle baseball games in 2017 ate 18,000 toasted crickets over the course of three nights. In addition to processed plant-based meat alternatives, climate activists argue that adding bugs to the American diet could help combat climate change.
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