Islamic scholars consulted by a leading producer of cultivated meat say that the newfangled protein — which is grown from animal cells and doesn’t require animals to be slaughtered — can be halal, or permissible under Muslim law.

And the Jewish Orthodox Union this month certified a strain of lab-grown chicken as kosher for the first time, “marking a significant step forward for the food technology’s acceptance under Jewish dietary law,” as the Times of Israel put it.

  • vlad@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 年前

    I think vegans are completely against any meat because they think it’s unhealthy, and vegetarians think it’s immoral.

    I just think it’s tasty.

    • Echo Dot@feddit.uk
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      2 年前

      Vegans are the ones that think it’s immoral. It’s like the joke goes, how can you tell if someone is vegan, because they will tell you.

      Vegetarian is just a dietary preference.

    • Spzi@lemm.ee
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      2 年前

      Vegans have more to do with morals than vegetarians. Vegans may refrain from using animal based products like leather, which can be completely unrelated to health. A vegetarian diet is just that, a diet without meat. Can be for health or moral reasons, unspecified.

      Many things are tasty, many of which don’t have the detrimental implications of animal products, especially meat.