Republican legislators push bill that would prohibit low-income families from accessing cultivated meat

Credit: Warren Davidson/X
Credit: Warren Davidson/X

In the House of Representatives, a group of politicians have co-sponsored a bill that would prohibit the US government from investing in cultivated meat.

It is the latest version of theย Real Marketing Edible Artificials Truthfully Act โ€“ or the REAL Meat Act โ€“ which has been introduced by Ohio representative Warren Davidson.

The draft legislation targets cultivated meat, specifically federal support of these proteins. โ€œFake cell-cultured meat not only poses a health risk to the human body, but it also threatens the livelihoods of Americaโ€™s hard-working ranchers, livestock farmers, and butchers,โ€ Davidson said in a statement, invoking a familiar rhetoric and escalating theย misinformationย about theย health credentials of cultivated meat.

โ€œCongress must act to ensure US taxpayers are not footing the bill for this inferior, experimental product,โ€ he added.

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The bill aims to prohibit federal funding for the research and advancement, promotion, advertisement, and production of cultivated meat. If passed, the legislation would also prevent these foods from being part ofย federal nutrition programmesย like the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) for low-income families.

Even theย meat industry has been against bans like the ones issued by Florida and Alabama. The North American Meat Institute, the countryโ€™s oldest and largest trade association (representing 95% of the USโ€™s meat output, has argued that such legislation โ€œlimits consumer choiceโ€ and denies people โ€œaccess to food optionsโ€).

This is an excerpt. Read the original post here

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