• GladiusB
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    215 days ago

    No. One of my sisters is a vegan and we have had extensive talks about it. Yea garbanzo and peanut butter are great power packed availability. But peanut butter only goes so far. Garbanzo needs a massive amount to match isolated whey or anything close.

    I totally agree with the environmental impact. I wish I could have locally sourced options that wouldn’t impact the environment so much.

    • @[email protected]
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      15 days ago

      I love how micromanaging nutrition only ever comes up when veganism is mentioned. Do you think people who gorge themselves on steak and cheeseburgers are inherently healthier than someone with a vegan diet because they consume animal protein? You might be shocked to learn that the densest source of protein doesn’t come from an animal.

      EDIT: You DO have local sources available to you. It’s in the same grocery store you buy slaughtered animals from.

      • GladiusB
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        215 days ago

        That isn’t factual. The diversity of food is different in every area. And it doesn’t come up just in veganism. Nutritionists and athletes talk about it often.

        • @[email protected]
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          1015 days ago

          You can stop pretending that you’re trying to advocate for people in food-starved areas. Veganism, believe it or not, has never actually been about trying to force people in marginalized areas to adopt a vegan diet. Veganism is about harm reduction, full stop. The people who appeal to veganism are the same people who can make those choices in any grocery store that they go to, whether they live in a food desert or not. Personally, I don’t live in an area that’s considered vegan-friendly. However, I find myself to be okay with that purely because I know for a fact that my decisions aren’t reliant on convenience alone.

          • GladiusB
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            115 days ago

            You can’t pretend to know who I am and what I advocate for. I am ending this conversation now because it isn’t from a place of understanding. It’s coming off as angry.

            • @[email protected]
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              15 days ago

              I know exactly who you are. You are the lived experience of many vegans of the person that pretends to know more than us, as if every single person who went vegan didn’t have a deep personal conflict with themselves before deciding to align their morality with their lifestyle. You know very little, yet try to advocate against us on our own perceived behalf, using your own sister like some sort of “I have a (insert group here) so I definitely know things”. I don’t need to understand you because I was you. The difference is that at some point, I was willing to acknowledge I didn’t know enough about the moral vacancy of the situation and decided to learn more. The more I learned, the more I grew disgusted with our systemic murder of sentient life and how we didn’t need this destructive mechanism to survive in any way, shape, or form.

              • GladiusB
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                315 days ago

                I’m not advocating against you. I flat out don’t agree with you and you are too close minded to think that someone has the same information as you and makes a different choice. You are no better. You aren’t more ethical. You just pick on the people that don’t agree with you to feel superior because you can’t find it any other way. You’re a sad person that can’t hear when someone says “hey I get it” and not keep pressing on.

                And the most pathetic and arrogant part about it is that you have the tenacity to state you know me from one conversation with one topic on the Internet. So close minded to not think a person has more meutia than a single topic. People are complex. You should open your intellect and think that someone can see differently.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 days ago

      Local meat is not better for the environment. Scientific information is only one click away. Look at this graph, it’s impressive. Plus:

      Vegan Bullshit Bingo
      #11 I only eat organic and regional

      While seemingly 99% of people say this about themselves, the proportion of organic meat in virtually all western countries is less than 2%. Maybe you consciously buy organic products for the big feast, but then in everyday life you go get your weekly hamburger, the restaurant around the corner, or “just this once” prefer to reach for the somewhat cheaper discount products. Moreover, in organic farming, animals suffer and die in the same way. Organic cannot solve the core problems: Murder and exploitation for pleasure. The goal is more about soothing the conscience of consumers rather than actually helping the animals.