I think this is the main point. It's the evangelist attitude, the "your are bad and I'm better" and I'll tell you that. People don't like evangelists, especially arrogant evangelists that are full of themselves and see them as being better, more enlightened, woke, contrary to others. This is a quite general issue with any kind of evangelist: a leftist progressive (looking down on those right-wing fascists), a conspiracy nut (looking at as others as the ignorant sheeple) or the classical right-wing evangelist (looking down at those hedonistic atheists).I don't think people hate vegans per say. They hate vegan evangelists. Vegans who do it because they think its the right thing to do, and don't believe it makes them better than other people, I think are respected like anyone else. But, these vegans don't make a display of it, they're just living their life. — Philosophim
And thus you also have vegan evangelists.Veganism is an ethical philosophy, not merely a diet. — Amalac
Don't predators cause suffering to their prey? And humans have domesticated animals and farmed them from around 11 000 - 9 000 BC, only a thousand or two years after plants were "domesticated" in similar fashion by humans. That this has been a necessity for our present numbers of humans and our society and culture should be considered too.And if your diet finances an industry which is cruel to animals, then you will have to admit that you care more about tasting some particular flavor than about the suffering of animals. — Amalac
And thus you also have vegan evangelists. — ssu
Don't predators cause suffering to their prey? — ssu
And humans have domesticated animals and farmed them from around 11 000 - 9 000 BC — ssu
That this has been a necessity for our present numbers of humans and our society and culture should be considered too. — ssu
When organisms are consumed, approximately 10% of the energy in the food is fixed into their flesh and is available for next trophic level (carnivores or omnivores). When a carnivore or an omnivore in turn consumes that animal, only about 10% of energy is fixed in its flesh for the higher level.
For example, the Sun releases 10,000 J of energy, then plants take only 100 J of energy from sunlight (Only 1% of energy is taken up by plants from sun); thereafter, a deer would take 10 J (10% of energy) from the plant. A wolf eating the deer would only take 1 J (10% of energy from deer). A human eating the wolf would take 0.1J (10% of energy from wolf), etc.
In fact, the examples of other animals "farming" shows that this basically is a symbiotic relationship which humans as being smart animals have advanced. — ssu
I do not deny that there are some people (a small percentage) who at present need to consume animal products in order to stay healthy, and I don't object to them doing that, but those of us who can stay healthy without consuming them should simply stop purchasing them. — Amalac
I think it's the part where you tell other adults what they should and shouldn't eat that gives veganism a cringe twitch. — Cheshire
what I'd say is rather more like this: I think that if you stop purchasing the products of animal cruelty, you will be a more moral person than if you don't, in a way similar to how a person who stopped murdering and stealing would be more moral than what he'd be if he chose to instead continue doing those things. — Amalac
The constant equivocation between minimal pain and outright cruelty. — Cheshire
Or put another way for illustration. Do people constantly hound you for moral guidance in general? Aside from sandwich construction? If they don't need your assistance in making moral decisions most of the time, then why suppose it's appropriate or invited in this regard. — Cheshire
As for how “appropriate” it is, tell me: is it appropriate to tell a murderer that they should stop murdering other people? Is it appropriate to tell a slave owner that you think what they are doing is wrong and that they should stop doing it? They may not feel like it is, but I think you'll agree with me that that is irrelevant in those cases. So why should it be any different in the case of cruelty to animals? — Amalac
In our natural state we hunted animals. Pretty sure that process wasn't very pleasant. I do agree that consumer activism has a part to play in society and that part is growing. Do you ensure the fair pay and working conditions of the people picking your vegetables?To be precise it’s not eating meat which I think is wrong, it’s purchasing meat, because when many people purchase animal products, they cause more animals to be treated cruelly. I have no problem if someone wants to eat some dead animal struck by lightning which they found on the street, since that doesn’t increase the demand nor cause any cruelty. — Amalac
Right, you have yet to differentiate between pain, significant pain, and animal cruelty. We can't eat them alive and according to you eating them isn't wrong. So, a minimal amount of pain is inflicted. Calling this cruelty ignores the horror that is true animal cruelty. Putting a lobster in the freezer till it falls asleep is not the same as beating an animal for fun. Confusing the two is dishonest and that should be troubling if veganism is truly morally transcendent.Whose equivocation? I already told some other user that the amount of suffering should be significant, which is obviously true in the case of cows, pigs and the like. — Amalac
It's dishonest to label every pain felt by animal for the production of food as "cruelty". It merely serves as shock value to gain a false moral position. People have balanced the notion of using animals and respecting their lifeforce for 10s of thousands of years. It wasn't discovered by vegans. — Cheshire
Do you ensure the fair pay and working conditions of the people picking your vegetables? — Cheshire
So, a minimal amount of pain is inflicted. — Cheshire
Putting a lobster in the freezer till it falls asleep is not the same as beating an animal for fun. — Cheshire
If it were a more reasonable position there wouldn't be a need to emotionalize it with "cruelty" — Cheshire
and compare the general public to thieves and murders. — Cheshire
Maybe it's just unreasonable to take an absolutist position and then hold everyone else to it — Cheshire
or do you have a novel definition of this as well — Cheshire
You definitely are of the evangelist sort, just looking at the loaded terms you use and from the debate with others. I have no desire to debate an issue of faith. It goes absolutely nowhere.I'd say is rather more like this: I think that if you stop purchasing the products of animal cruelty, you will be a more moral person than if you don't, in a way similar to how a person who stopped murdering and stealing would be more moral than what he'd be if he chose to instead continue doing those things. — Amalac
I took those definitions from a dictionary, I didn't make them up. Anyhow, think specifically about physically torturing humans for amusement. I don't think it's unreasonable to be opposed to that in all circumstances. That's an absolutist position, and also a perfectly reasonable one.
But like I said, I think purchasing animal products is not bad in all circumstances, so I don't take an absolutist view there. — Amalac
then yes you will need prove it's as bad as torturing people for fun. — Cheshire
when a vegan imposes their judgement on others knowing full well they did (and probably still do on occasion) use animals as means to an end. — Cheshire
So, the alternative you have presented is the realistic belief that it's 'not bad' in all circumstances. — Cheshire
Imposing or labeling other people's moral choices with your judgement. A person buying a burger has zero effect on your life and the choices you make. You wouldn't want someone telling you right and wrong would you? I agree, bringing up different examples of moral and immoral actions isn't helpful.If I tell a thief that I think he should stop stealing, am I “imposing” my life style or ethical philosophy to him? (And no, I'm not saying that one person buying a burger is just as bad as one person stealing someone's car, I just want to understand what you mean by “imposing”). — Amalac
labeling other people's moral choices with your judgement. — Cheshire
A person buying a burger has zero effect on your life — Cheshire
You wouldn't want someone telling you right and wrong would you? — Cheshire
I agree, bringing up different examples of moral and immoral actions isn't helpful. — Cheshire
It creates of subtext of needing to guilt trip people as if they can't make a decision without your approval. — Cheshire
Then, assuming they owe you justification for how they live — Cheshire
it's an unpleasant implicit superiority or simply lacking the willingness to respect others right to make their own mistakes. — Cheshire
What if I decide to eat simply less meat? — Cheshire
I agree, but does "mainstream" vegan doctrine? — Cheshire
I think that if you stop purchasing the products of animal cruelty, you will be a more moral person than if you don't, ... — Amalac
One person chooses to go vegan, another may visit lonely elders in nursing homes, and yet another donates money to the homeless, etc. What makes one better than the other? — Tzeentch
Should people who visit lonely elders in nursing homes go around telling other people that they would live more moral lives if they too visited lonely elders in nursing homes? — Tzeentch
This argument is weak because livestock feed off agriculture. IOW we grow stuff and thus kill animals in the process of that wing of agriculture to feed livestock who are then eaten. Livestock require more land per ounce of nutritive whatever than an ounce of non-meat foods. So, yes, they contribute, but vegans would contribute less to even agricultural plant deaths and attendant animals deaths.You have animal cruelty but statics show agricultural kill about 1.5 million native animals like gophers, foxes and other small creatures by agricultural machinery alone. Meaning if you order a salads you still indirectly contribute to a animals death in some way. — TheQuestion
This argument is weak because livestock feed off agriculture. — Bylaw
Then there is self-righteousness--the vegan frosting on the cake (which is gluten free, fat free, egg free, and sugar-free). — Bitter Crank
Vegan Frosting Brands
Pillsbury – All 13 Flavors of Creamy Supreme Pillsbury Frosting, the Pastry Bag Pillsbury Frosting, and the Funfetti Pillsbury frostings are vegan– even the cream cheese, buttercream, and milk chocolate flavors! This is a little weird to be but all of the Pillsbury frostings use sugar, palm oil, and corn syrup as the base with various additives to still be vegan. Granted, some vegans option to avoid palm oil as it may not be sustainably sourced and may be reducing the rain forests but in terms of straight vegan and if you’re wondering if Pillsbury frostings are vegan, they are indeed vegan and do not contain any animal product. ...
— Random Website
I agree, but does "mainstream" vegan doctrine? — Cheshire
Typical BC crankiness. — Ennui Elucidator
Veganism has NOTHING to do with flavor profiles or ingredient choice outside of not deliberately contributing to animal suffering by the methods/products used in making the food item. — Ennui Elucidator
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.