The Korea Herald

Lab-grown beef is red meat for conservati­ves

Both humankind’s dominion over nature, which runs strong in the Christian strand of conservati­ve thought, and the masculiniz­ed meat-eating culture would be under threat.

- By Tyler Cowen

What do some Republican­s have against lab-grown meat? Legislatur­es in Alabama, Arizona, Tennessee and Florida are all considerin­g bans on the sale or import of so-called “cell-cultured food products.” In Florida, a bill has reached Gov. Ron DeSantis’s desk, and though he has not yet signed it, he has come out strongly in favor of meat.

The case for (and against) these laws isn’t primarily economic, though DeSantis did speak of the importance of agricultur­e, and the Florida Cattlemen’s Associatio­n has lobbied against the bill. (Florida has more beef cows than all but eight states.) At any rate, it is unclear whether artificial meat will ever be cost-effective. Or consumers might never want it in great quantities. Or it might coexist with real meat, just as today pork and beef coexist.

Instead, let me offer another theory: The anti-lab-grown-meat movement is about conservati­ve cultural insecurity — the fear that, without the force of law, some conservati­ve cultural norms will fade away.

To return to the economic argument, as fanciful as it may be: Imagine that lab-grown meat proves feasible at a reasonable cost. It might end up cheaper than beef from a cow, and it might also be better for the climate. In such a world, there might be growing pressures to abandon real meat for the lab-grown kind. There could even be a political movement to tax or ban real meat, similar to carbon taxes or plans to phase out fossil fuels.

Currently, there is no momentum in that direction. For all the talk of vegetarian­ism and veganism, the percentage of Americans who practice those beliefs seems to be roughly flat. Many Americans like eating meat, for better or worse. But if real meat had a true substitute, perhaps the political calculus would differ.

This is the real fear — not of lab-grown meat itself, but of the changing culture its popularity would represent. Whether conservati­ves find the meat substitute to be adequate is beside the point. Society would have decided that some of their most cherished beliefs could be disposed of. Both humankind’s dominion over nature, which runs strong in the Christian strand of conservati­ve thought, and the masculiniz­ed meat-eating culture — more specifical­ly, the meat-grilling culture — would be under threat.

If artificial meat is banned, of course, none of that can happen.

In one sense, critics of conservati­sm should be heartened by the campaign against lab-grown meat. If I were a mainstream animalrigh­ts advocate, I would revise upward my estimate of my own power and influence.

The logical solution here is neither banning meat nor protecting it. Instead, it is allowing science to come to the rescue. Scientists are already working on geneticall­y engineered cows that do not release so many harmful greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Maybe they can geneticall­y engineer other animals so they do not suffer so much in captivity.

What this culture-war struggle needs is a lateral move: greater respect for the culture of science. Science can alleviate problems of both climate and animal suffering.

Granted, that possibilit­y may seem pretty remote at the moment. On the other hand, this solution does not require public consensus about the virtues or dangers of lab meat, nor for that matter a vote in Congress or by any state legislatur­e. It merely requires ingenuity from scientists, and that has long been one of history’s better bets.

Tyler Cowen is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist and a professor of economics at George Mason University. The views expressed here are the writer’s own. — Ed.

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