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How The Meat Eaters Look When They Say These Things

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20 comments
  • To all the people downvoting this:

    Vegan here. I got all of these responses multiple times online and in face-2-face discussions. And believe me when I say, people where mostly serious when they put out these statements.

    The clowns on the right kind of describes my inner WTF response quite accurately though. 🤷

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  • Holy shit the last one is so infuriating. Like, even if they did, you end up needing to cultivate a lot less plants if you're vegan instead of a carnie, thus still reducing harm overall

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    • As a social animal, we have a strong instinct to conform to the herd's views, because it's more important to our survival to agree with the group than it is to be objectively correct. But then we must live in a state of cognitive dissonance, constantly protecting the lies we tell ourselves. A little bit of thought shows why carnists "murder" more plants than vegans do. But does take a little bit of thought, and if you don't think, it sounds like it makes sense, so it's the perfect distraction. The point of these "arguments" isn't to make and support a claim about reality. It's simply to distract the person making the argument from their own thoughts and feelings that they are unwilling or unable to process. They are very afraid of disturbing the worldview that they uncritically accepted as a child. But that worldview isn't based in reality, it's based in wishful thinking and propaganda from capitalists. It requires constant bulwarking through denial, distraction, histrionics, groupthink, etc. People are genuinely afraid that they might change their mind, and suddenly find themselves without a herd. They'll tell themselves any stupid thing to prevent that from happening.

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  • Non vegan here.

    One thing I did notice as that most times when people say "in your face", is that some vegan tries to convert people like Arch lovers to windows fans. It's not wrong per say, but it is quite annoying after a while, and may lead to see vegans in a bad light.

    There's also the question of morality. I've seen the argument thrown around a lot that it is "wrong" to eat meat. Which can really annoy people who see it as natural.

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    • PS:

      I forgot an important note on the "morality" point.

      It might not always be obvious to non-vegans, but Veganism is not a diet. It actually is a moral compass. To make this more clear, let me copy you some of the "definition of veganism":

      "Veganism is a philosophy and 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; [...]"

      That is veganism. Nothing more, nothing less. The things we collectively do as vegans are just consequences of internalizing this philosophy and acting according to it.

      That's why the topic of "morality" often comes up in discussion with vegans, but for an outsider going that route might sound a little far-fetched. But it actually isn't - it is at the core of our actions.

      Just wanted to put that out there.

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    • Which can really annoy people who see it as natural.

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't this considered a logical falicy?

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      • It is. But in the mind of these people, this is a valid concern and we need to be able to lead them away from this mindset. We have to guide them to new insights, not fight them over it. (Not that I would imply that YOU were trying to fight.)

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    • I would like to give you the chance to see it from our perspective:

      If you would see something fundamentally wrong in the streets/online, wouldn't you speak up about it?

      Like for example, someone boasts online that they steal from a local family business every day and on their way out, they punch the owners kid in the face. And others are even rooting for that person in the comment section. - You would still speak up about it, wouldn't you? You would try to set that person straight.

      As vegans, we came to the conclusion that using and exploiting animals is a wrong thing to do. We've seen too many horrible things while experiencing the gentleness and kindness of these animals. We have sworn ourselfs to change our ways to not be part of that anymore and we try to fight for them - as they are not able to do it on their own. We speak up about the injustice that we perceive - just as you would do in the other instance.

      We know that we are annoying because of that, annoying because we speak up. The people that try to break the echo chamber are always considered annoying. But we can't help it. We need to do something at least.

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  • "My morality is based on what lions do"

    Really?

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    • I had the genuine question asked once about "But lions do eat meat and how would you stop them?" In a discussion about why I am vegan. 🙈

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      • lol that's absurd

        i think it's important to not mock those ridiculous questions, no matter how bad people act towards you, though. im not a vegan myself and i can imagine people being genuinely confused and saying some very weird things

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  • Eating meat is considered in most scientific thoughts as an evolutionary trait that occurred due to humans' original nomadic nature. Meaning it was easier to hunt an animal for food than having to replace energy and proteins with plants. Plus at the time meat was introduced into the human diet, we would have had to compete with grazing animals, and edible plants were scarce. There are many good alternatives to meat, and I personally agree that cattle industries have gone too far in many regards. However, meat is still one of the easiest ways to give yourself the nutrients required for the human body

    https://www.nature.com/scitable/knowledge/library/evidence-for-meat-eating-by-early-humans-103874273/

    https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10105836/

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    • Eating meat is considered [...] as an evolutionary trait

      Correct. But these early humans had no supermarkets or global trade systems. We (and our food selection process) has very little to do with the constraints that these previous generations had. Your argument basically boils down to "it is natural for us to eat meat. This is called "appeal to nature" and is a logical fallacy (i.e. not a very good argument).

      cattle industries have gone too far

      Kudos to you for acknowledging that.

      meat is still one of the easiest ways to give yourself the nutrients required

      I do not agree, as meat is lacking in some of the essential nutrients or has a suboptimal composition of them. But even if it was the best source, that would not necessarily justify everything we do (i.e. harm other sentient beings) to get it. To give you an (over the top) counter example: Human meat would even be much better in terms of it's nutrient composition - but no one would argue for canibalism because of that fact.

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