Anyone remember the classic sci-fi dystopia "Soylent Green"? It posited a future dominated by ecological and societal ills like dying oceans, global warming, pollution, corporatist rule, poverty, societal breakdown, and massive overpopulation? All that was left for the masses to eat was plankton, a future the LA Times story might suggest. Food for thought. Soylent Red, anyone?
Anyone remember the classic sci-fi dystopia "Soylent Green"? It posited a future dominated by ecological and societal ills like dying oceans, global warming, pollution, corporatist rule, poverty, societal breakdown, and massive overpopulation? All that was left for the masses to eat was plankton, a future the LA Times story might suggest. Food for thought. Soylent Red, anyone?