Nature’s Fynd article share

Unlike my normal randomness, this piece started because one of our correspondents kept getting repeated profile-view alerts from Nature’s Fynd.

At first?

Whatever.

But after the pattern kept repeating, my brain did what it always does:

it started pulling threads.

Next thing I know, I’m digging through:

NASA research,

Yellowstone extremophiles, closed-loop survival systems, fungal bioreactors, space-based food infrastructure, industrial fermentation, and suddenly remembering watching Soylent Green in environmental science class back in high school.

No, this isn’t some conspiracy article.

And no, nobody is secretly turning people into breakfast patties.

But the deeper I went into the science, the more one thing became obvious:

This technology category is far bigger than “alternative protein.”

This is about survival infrastructure.

Long-duration space travel.

Harsh-environment sustainability.

Closed-loop ecosystems.

Waste-to-resource systems.

Biological efficiency at scale.

The possibilities are endless.

And honestly?

So are the ethical questions depending on how technologies like this evolve over the next century.

Because once civilization reaches the point where nothing can be wasted, biology itself starts looking very different.

Either way, one thing is certain:

The future is going to look a lot stranger than most people think.

Only time will tell whether that future feels utopian…

or like the opening chapter of a sci-fi movie we already watched decades ago.

www.fnaround.com/articles/naturesfynd

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