Now that Canadians are over the psychological threshold of eating bugs - with some of them even defending the practice - and seeing $70/kg ribeyes in the store, the next step in the process of turning waste into money using Canadians is going to be "Reclaimed Protein". By 2021 half of canadian's protein will come from reclaimed protein and other alternative sources.
Within six months you will see Canadians on Jow Forums telling you that there is nothing wrong with 'reclaimed protein' and that they prefer it to ~American Beef~.
things you will soon hear canadian shills say:
>reclaimed protein is no worse than bugs >the bugs you eat have poo in them >literally how is this bad >your stomach cant tell the difference >protein is protein >it's processed >it has less poo than bugs >it's affordable >protein is protein >am I actually averse to eating this reclaimed fetus protein or is it just my cultural programming
>protein is protein Is this not true? Black beans have protein, s*y has protein, beef has protein. It's all protein. Bugs have protein. No difference
Daniel Powell
Imagine how much wasted protein comes back out in our poop. Isn't there some way we could harvest it? We could buy waste protein off poorer nations, which would give us a great new food source and boost the economies of the developing world. Anyone else up for giving this a shot?
Matthew Perry
canadians already eat bugs with poo in them - they are six months from such products being pushed by their state media.
I love these threads. Mmm prime grade striploin. Cheap and tasty.
Parker Nguyen
Private, modern farming is slavery. I only raise what i need to eat throughout the years/maintain animal numbers. Trade will locals for more food diversity.
Jason Brooks
you have nothing to love about these threads, they prove steak wise is that there is no such thing as a $10 steak in canada and you think garbage steak cuts are a luxury cut.
You pay $8.91 per pound for eye of round - the highest form of paypiggism yet seen
>To be fair, you have to have a very high IQ to understand Canadian in-store prices. The costing is extremely subtle, and without a solid grasp of climate science and the science-driven environmentalist ideology most of the rationale will go over a typical user's head. >pic related
>be canadian >go to grocery store >deli is crowded by pink haired roasties >they won't eat bugs >get left with bug steak >it's twice as expensive because no one buys it pic related