50 years from now, maybe all the meat on the meat counters will be lab-grown. Would you eat that ?
What a huge impact that would have on the world we live in.
No more sheep or cows, in the countryside grazing. You would lose so many places which only look like they do because of the grazing of sheep.
Exmoor all those places only look like they do because they have been grazed by sheep for hundreds of years. All that would go if the meat industry went, it would be a different looking country.
A lot of militant vegans seem to forget it's farmers who keep and look after these animals and lots of them are not really wild but get fed, which costs money.
Plus the farmer goes out and finds them in snowy weather, gets a vet if his animal has trouble giving birth. No one else gets out of bed in the night in snow to make sure the sheep are ok.
Doing away with meat wouldn't just mean these animals would disappear from the countryside, but that our countryside would change, other animals wildlife would lose their habitat.
For some reason militant vegans seem to think farmers will keep these animals as pets, they won't. It costs time & money. ( I've had this argument with animal rights people before, they naively think the farmer is going to carry on keeping these animals, or that they can be turned loose, most have no idea how much care they actually require)
Most of our wild scenery would change, we would have a different kind of landscape.
For example, Exmoor is only Exmoor because it has been grazed over hundreds of years by sheep. Same in Wales, except in some places people complain it's over grazed by sheep.
Having grown meat has its positives, but it will also impact our ecosystem, our wildlife, our countryside.
Picture this , replace every field of cows and sheep and their spring lambs, with fields of yellow rape seed, field on field of purely crops, all the same.
Crops are sterile environments for wildlife, deserts of often inedible plants.
Is this what people want?
No more spring lambs frolicking in the sun?
No more moorland?
It might not impact the scenery in India, but it will ours.