My main motive for going vegan is compassion towards animals. Health is a secondary but still essential consideration.
Is it preferable to just have farms to feed people or to have farms to feed animals and then ranches and pastures to feed people, which requires even more land?
If your hinting at the fact that a vegan is just as big a hypocrite as a person who consumes meat then you are on the right track
My experiences are that vegans are vegetarians who have turned it into their own personal religion.
You can substitute most of the proteins and nutrients.you can get from meat with non-meat but why would you want to? Nothing wrong with a nice juicy steak every once in a while.
It's no more of a religion than choosing to show compassion towards a person. Do you accuse any person who shows compassion towards another of religious fanaticism?
Who (which person) are vegans showing compassion for when they are lecturing me on how I should not be eating meat?
Have I been lecturing you on not eating meat? I sometimes refer to myself as a vegan even though I do eat meat occasionally out of respect towards my host. I just don't buy it. From what I'm seeing in this forum, it's rather the meat-eaters who are hostile towards the vegans and not the other way around.
What about compassion towards flora? You know the natural habitats that get broken down and repurposed for farmland so that you can have that "healthy choice". It may sound like a stretch but habitat loss isnt only caused by lumberjacks. Also farmlands are bastions for invasive plants which furthur degrade biodiversity.
Is it preferable to just have farms to feed people or to have farms to feed animals and then ranches and pastures to feed people, which requires even more land?
Logging by itself does not cause habitat loss since we replant what we log. Including some of the roads Just like nature. Where it becomes a problem is when that land is not replanted but made into a subdivision or strip mall.
Vegetables just taste better when processed into higher forms like meat.
Vegans end up as children of the corn
My main motive for going vegan is compassion towards animals. Health is a secondary but still essential consideration.
Have I been lecturing you on not eating meat? I sometimes refer to myself as a vegan even though I do eat meat occasionally out of respect towards my host. I just don't buy it. From what I'm seeing in this forum, it's rather the meat-eaters who are hostile towards the vegans and not the other way around.
My experiences are that vegans are vegetarians who have turned it into their own personal religion.
Carnivores are a lot less preachy.
More dangerous, perhaps ...