Posted on 02/18/2023 6:40:23 PM PST by Golden Eagle
The wings I’ve seen and tasted of late have been deformed enough to make me wonder.
it’s absolutely correct that lab-grown “meat” is manufactured from so-called “immortal” cells, where said term “immortal” is simply a euphemism for cancer ... yes, that’s right: lab-grown meat IS cancer!
You vill own nossings, you vill eat ze bugzz and ze tumorzzz ... und ve don’t give a schiess vedder you likez it or not.
They are cancer cells.
I figure cooked “meat” would not pose a danger.
Nonetheless….
They are cancer cells.
They’re actually used in cancer research.
Put them in mice, tumors grow.
You should read about Henrietta Lacks. She was the original ‘live forever’ line of cells from her uterine cancer.
Up to this point I thought it was a thumbs-up review of some kind.
Safe and effective
There's no way in HELL I would eat a rare steak made from cancer cells!
Tasty Tumors - Now with more Oat Cell!
Best eaten before the Great Reset
Serve lab-grown meat at the White House. For every meal.
Serve it at the next global climate meeting and future WEF gatherings.
Put it on the menu at the U.N.
I laughed all the way while reading through the post and comments.
sickening ping
This makes soylent green look like the healthy alternative...
Yes, cancer cells are used in research. What does that have to do with cultivated meat. There ARE other sources of “immortal” cell lineages.
The further down the chain you go, the fact that these cells started as cancer cell gets diluted as the message and they all just become cells. And they are being used worldwide.
I was struck by how lethal this cancer was to her, but as cells, they lost that lethal tag. And I do understand that their are other lines but it seems that would cause even more blending of lines.
https://www.webmd.com/cancer/cervical-cancer/hela-cells-cervical-cancer
HeLa cells get their name from the person they belonged to: Henrietta Lacks, a Black woman and mother of five who in 1951 got diagnosed with cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
While Lacks got treatment at the hospital, a doctor there named George Gey collected and studied a biopsy sample of her cancer cells without her knowledge and consent. He did that with samples from other cervical cancer patients at the hospital, too. Today, reputable medical centers (Johns Hopkins included) ask a patient for their full consent before using their cells or other tissues for research.
Henrietta Lacks passed away in October 1951 at 31 years old. But the doctor who studied her cancer cells discovered that they could multiply continuously in the lab — unlike other patients’ cells, which died quickly. This led scientists to call HeLa cells the first “immortal” line of human cells.
Now they are doing the same for your chicken nuggets.
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