Society & Culture3 mins ago
Wy Do You Hate Vegans? Vegan Here... Ask Me Anything :)
333 Answers
I love this site... have been a member for far too long lol
I rarely post but am always here and as a vegan I am basically gobsmacked at times at peoples attitude towards my lifestyle choice and yes it is a choice. As is yours.
BUT [from the Vegan Society]
Veganism is a way of living which seeks to exclude, as far as is possible and practicable, all forms of exploitation of, and cruelty to, animals for food, clothing or any other purpose.
At 47 years of age [50 this year] I adopted the Vegan lifestyle because I became aware of the apathy and my own jaded sense of what is right and wrong. Right to kill a pig... but not a dog? blah blah blah
Have you ever watched any documentaries concerning veganism? Earthlings? Cowspiracy? What the health?
Do you know what cognitive dissonance is?
I'm not posting this to be confrontational, I am truley interested in what people think :)
Lisa x
I rarely post but am always here and as a vegan I am basically gobsmacked at times at peoples attitude towards my lifestyle choice and yes it is a choice. As is yours.
BUT [from the Vegan Society]
Veganism is a way of living which seeks to exclude, as far as is possible and practicable, all forms of exploitation of, and cruelty to, animals for food, clothing or any other purpose.
At 47 years of age [50 this year] I adopted the Vegan lifestyle because I became aware of the apathy and my own jaded sense of what is right and wrong. Right to kill a pig... but not a dog? blah blah blah
Have you ever watched any documentaries concerning veganism? Earthlings? Cowspiracy? What the health?
Do you know what cognitive dissonance is?
I'm not posting this to be confrontational, I am truley interested in what people think :)
Lisa x
Answers
Not veganism naomi, but vegeterianis m and I'm starting tomorrow when I go shopping for food. I totally agree with andres, there is far too much suffering in the animal world, all down to us. How awful for them to know they are going to die.
07:58 Mon 06th May 2019
And just to add.. It's not about value of an animal at all. It's about the eaters preference. It's like some people like fruit and vegetables but won't eat tomato.. Some people don't eat meat at all yet eat fish. pescaterian life.
It's not just about ethics.. It's about simple will and desire as well as disgust and ease. I'd rather kill a cockroach than a horse.. but i'd rather eat a horse burger than a cockroach burger. I hold a horse in higher regard as a sentient being than i do a cockroach.. simply because there are probably about 1 horse for every 100 cockroach in
the world.
It's not just about ethics.. It's about simple will and desire as well as disgust and ease. I'd rather kill a cockroach than a horse.. but i'd rather eat a horse burger than a cockroach burger. I hold a horse in higher regard as a sentient being than i do a cockroach.. simply because there are probably about 1 horse for every 100 cockroach in
the world.
Whoever you are, whatever you are, and whatever you believe in, if you were starving, and I mean really starving, and I wouldn't think anyone on here as experience such, you would eat (anything) you could lay your hands on. Our shops are crammed full of food, and choice, so we end up spoiled and picky. This thread would be a joke to some parts of the world. :)
"you would eat (anything) you could lay your hands on"
Largely rubbish, but there are scintillas of truth behind the thought. Narayanan Krishnan, the ex-celebrity Indian chef, gave up his celebrity and his wealth to found and run a refuge in Southern India to feed and care for the starving rejects of that society, after he came across an old man so hungry he was eating his own excrement (or as you would say round here, poo).
But, curiously, cannibalism and the eating of companion animals is much less common than teacake's cynicism would suggest.
There are many stories of people starving to death and NOT eating their fellow humans, or sacrificing their faithful dogs or cats, but rather dying first.
Don't judge all by your own standards, teacake; thankfully, others live by different codes.
BB
Largely rubbish, but there are scintillas of truth behind the thought. Narayanan Krishnan, the ex-celebrity Indian chef, gave up his celebrity and his wealth to found and run a refuge in Southern India to feed and care for the starving rejects of that society, after he came across an old man so hungry he was eating his own excrement (or as you would say round here, poo).
But, curiously, cannibalism and the eating of companion animals is much less common than teacake's cynicism would suggest.
There are many stories of people starving to death and NOT eating their fellow humans, or sacrificing their faithful dogs or cats, but rather dying first.
Don't judge all by your own standards, teacake; thankfully, others live by different codes.
BB
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