Yea, like rural US. We literally had a ridiculous amount of real life "Cousin Eddies" from the National Lampoon's Griswold's movies. People eat squirrels here. People eat possums here. People eat rattlesnakes here and they have festivals where they slaughter them and cook them right there for yer too. US Has no grounds to stand on to criticize china for anything here.
This makes the first time a person has contracted variant Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease in the U.S.
www.popularmechanics.com
deadfood.com
Spring brings fields of beautiful wildflowers to warm areas of Texas, but the warm weather also brings rattlesnakes out of hibernation. Rattlesnake roundups became popular in Texas in the last 50 to 60 years as a way of limiting the number of snakes around cattle-grazing areas.
traveltips.usatoday.com
I might be wrong, but I was under the impression that the problem was not somebody eating an unusual variety of meat like a bat, but rather that these markets full of live animals are just too animals and too many different species all concentrated into one area. On a huge scale to cater for huge chinese populations.
Agriculture always can concentrate much more resources and thus life of one or few species in an area than a natural system usually can, creating monocultures that let pests and diseases thrive on an abundance of their hosts. Giving a virus an unnaturally potent breeding ground between all the animals of it's host species and with all that breeding comes the chance to gain a new potential host species with mutation and then with so many different species together that new host is available. So rather than the actual eating of bats, it's the concentration of live bats and all sorts of other animals tightly together to cater for millions or even billions of people.
The USA only has 300 something million people. I doubt their rural areas can compare in scale of concentrated animals to Chinese markets feeding their big cities.
But I don't know really. I've never been to China and I don't understand virus science so well.
On topic: I think I heard some company say they hope to have just a billion vaccines by the end of 2021? can't remember exactly but It's a long way to this being over in the world, though cynically I know first world countries will get first dibs and be vaccinated sooner there's a loooong path to a world with Covid-19 immunity even with vaccines. You can't just shit out 7 billion vaccines in a month after scientists are finally confident to say it's safe to use their vaccine.