VeganDE
community is read-only! moved to other instance:
https://discuss.tchncs.de/c/vegande
as a true German-speaking vegan you might also be interested in the German-speaking vegan circle-jerk:
https://discuss.tchncs.de/c/kreisvegs
old community info:
Deutschsprachige Veganys
bitte beachten:
- freundlich sein
- evidenzbasiert: keine tollkühnen Behauptungen ohne Datengrundlage. im Zweifel Quelle(n) mit angeben
- konstruktiv (kein "darauf erstmal ein Steak")
- Inhalte mit NSFW markieren, wenn sie Gewalt an Tieren zeigen
- beim Posten von Links den original Linktitel als Titel verwenden
- Dampf ablassen eher in kreisvegs
If depends on where you place your morals.
Human morals are antropocentric. The only reason we see "life" as something good is because we are descendants of people who saw "life" as someting good, it's in our genes, our instinct of survival. Our ancestors would have killed themselves without that instinctive attachment to life, so we wouldn't have been born in the first place. It's selection bias... natural selection.
The Earth, and the Universe in general, does not care about life (human or otherwise), or about suffering, or about apetite. The planets will continue to be there long after we are extinct. We (including the animals around us) and our feelings have zero "importance" in reality. There's no real importance scale but the one we make.
Humans categorize things in "importance" based on how they serve the human race. Even something like global warming, is important in so far as it puts humanity lives at risk, no other reason. It's not about "saving Earth" or the animals, it's about saving ourselves. We are the "important" ones, in our own view. If you don't agree with this then... why not advocate for a safe way to end ourselves without suffering? wouldn't the Earth be "better" without humanity? if the goal was really about minimizing suffering, that might be a good approach wouldn't it?
Note that I'm NOT advocating for suicide... but trying to show the argument is not that good.
I can understand vegans that do it for the future of the Earth (and humanity) and to fight our own autodestructive behavior. And I totally support that, I think it makes complete sense and it's what got me interested in this as well. But I don't understand those who first and foremost put the focus on the animal suffering. I feel that's more of an appeal to empathy (another evolutionary trait) and it's driven by emotion/instincts rather than logic/reason. The argument being made this way is more of an emotional blackmailing trying to make our reptile brain feel bad, not about giving an actual logical argument.
Vegetarisch. Steinigt mich gerne, aber mir ging es nie um Tierwohl.
Fleisch schmeckt mir einfach nicht und Fisch schon mal gar nicht. Das Konzept, aufgrund Tierwohl seine Diät zu ändern erschließt mich (noch) nicht so ganz aber Respekt an jene die es tun!
If I know it's a monstrous thing to do, push it to the back of my mind and do it anyway, that makes it worse, doesn't it?
The way I see it, this is just life on our planet. The food chain is a fact of life and trying to deny that is silly.
That said I want animals to be treated humanely and killed without suffering.
I respect the hell out of people that can be vegetarian, but I don't judge people for eating meat.
People don't deny the food chain, maybe they deny just one thing less :)
We're not in the wild anymore, struggling for day-to-day survival. We buy packaged food in supermarkets.
And wether that food contains vegetables or body parts is our choice. Both are equally available, equally tasty, equally priced, equally healthy.
I certainly won't condemn native tribes living their life. I just believe that with greater power comes greater responsibility.
Yet our bodies have barely evolved over the last tens of thousands of years. In that regard equal health of all options is a very bold claim. Just as a vegan dog is not a healthy dog, many of the replacements you mention seem insufficient to me.
Nope - I push the thought to the dark corners of my mind and try to get on with it.
I know it's the morally wrong thing to do, and I think with time, we'll be looked back upon as savages, but here I am.
I've been vegetarian before, and will likely go back to it soon, but in the meantime, I'm complicit in that suffering out of convenience.
I wish we'd just move past meat and normalise plant-based foods, but just like selfish convenience drives me to do the wrong thing, profit and general selfishness drives society broadly to do the wrong thing.
Bin manchmal vegan, manchmal vegetarisch. Grund: Klima! Aus dem Grund nehm' ich's auch nicht so streng. Fleisch vielleicht 3 mal im Jahr.