Waste plants sell treated human feces. There are waste plants that spray fields, there are plants that dry the manure but it is usable and it is the food we eat all the time. It can be done but its a pain. Are you a diligent kind of person who's going to mix well and wait till its ready. Meat has nothing to do with it. Everybody loves bat shit, most bats eat bugs not fruit, you know meat, chickens eat anything but we love chicken shit. It just takes longer to break down. Personally I'm not lugging around a bucket of my own shit (not yet anyway) and turning it over and over. I have other natural supplies for my compost with out shitting in a bucket.
I dont at all argue that it can and is treated and used. We should be able to not let out waste go to waste. Would I do it at home? No. Maybe if it was aged properly in sawdust, mulch, etc... for at least a year or two, and then hot composted, or vice versa. Lets just say I wouldn't use it unless aged, and hot composted. But if you've got that kinda time anyway, just compost food. I piss in the pile all the time too.
Different bats eat different food. Tropical bats mostly eat fruit. But either way, insects are much easier to digest than meat. And although commercial chicken factories feed chickens all sorts of wild shit (including ground up male chicks), there is some much N in their diets that when their shit is composted (which all chicken shit from the store is), it gets hot really easy, killing salmonella and such. I've owned chickens and even with a great organic vegetable,fruit, worms(bugs), and grain diet, you'd be silly not to properly age and compost it before using it on something you plan on consuming.
Human poo (especially considering the majority of people's diet) is stuff for processing plants and humanure-fed forest trees, in my humble opinion. I really don't think it's good to compost human, dog, or cat shit, as most of their diet is processed food and meat, and use it on anything you plan on consuming.
Now if I were trapped on semi-arid land, I would shit in the ground, try to layer it with some type of brown carbon plant material, cover it up, and plant in it the next year or something, idk.
To the OP, please don't do it