b'Implicit in Petrinis term is its complement: virtuous localization. That is, localization that is not parochial or xenophobic, but quite the oppositea place-based vision for planting seeds of systemic change.What does systemic change in food and finance look like here in the United States, the home of fast food and fast money? At first blush, it doesnt look local at all. It looks like fake meat.Fake meat brims with innovation. It screams of technological optimism. Look more closely, however, and what you see is a more advanced form of food industrialization offering solutions to problems caused by a less advanced form of food industrialization, e.g., feedlots and meat processing. Fake meat does address these problems, but what looks like disruptive change to the system is really product innovation within the system. Which is why it attracts venture capital.Fake meat is to the food industry what autonomous helicopters are to the military-industrial complexa new way to play the game, but not a new game. And, as with so many technologies, we cannot be sure that it wont lead to a new set of future problems. 123'