Me personally? I’ve become much less tolerant of sexist humor. Back in the day, cracking a joke at women’s expense was pretty common when I was a teen. As I’ve matured and become aware to the horrific extent of toxicity and bigotry pervading all tiers of our individualistic society, I’ve come to see how exclusionarly and objectifying that sort of ‘humor’ really is, and I regret it deeply.

  • @pineapplefriedrice
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    91 year ago

    I used to eat meat. Don’t anymore because the arguments against it are just that fucking strong. Basically unless you advocate for religious supremacy it’s hard to make a cohesive argument in favor of meat consumption.

    • @Llamajockey
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      101 year ago

      It tastes delicious is a pretty good argument

      • @WarlockLawyer
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        11 year ago

        Heroin feeling really fucking good isn’t a good argument for doing it

        • @Llamajockey
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          51 year ago

          Lol I was just joking…but I’d say “heroin feeling really fucking good” is the ONLY good reason for doing it. I doubt junkies do heroin n because they like their teeth falling out.

        • @Serinus
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          41 year ago

          It really is. There are more and better arguments against, but if those aren’t a consideration, load me up, fam.

          There are times when “ruins the likely short remainder of your life” doesn’t matter anymore.

          • @oddityoverseer
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            21 year ago

            This is the thing. In isolation, enjoyment is a decent argument for anything. But you have to step back and look at the impact of things to see if it’s a good or bad thing.

            In the case of animal consumption, the pros are:

            • it tastes good
            • it’s convenient
            • it means people don’t need to change.

            (People often add “it’s nutritionally necessary” here. I know I did. But that’s a myth. You can get everything you need from plants. If that wasn’t the case, vegans would be unable to live whole lives without issues, but that’s happening)

            The cons?

            1. It causes millions of land animals to be killed every single day, many in a very scary painful way. If you include fish, that jumps up to hundreds of millions
            2. Animal farming contributes to a big portion of the emissions that are causing climate change.
            3. It’s an extremely inefficient way to produce food for humans. Just think: in order to produce one pound of meat, how much input grains/grass/whatever was there? Why not skip the middleman and eat the plants directly?
            4. Industrial fishing is destroying our oceans, which also contributes to climate change.

            I could go on, but I digress.

            But these are the things I came to learn when I went vegan last year. So it came down to a simple question in the end: do the pros outweigh the cons? Do my tastebuds matter enough to contribute to all those problems? The answer was clear enough for me

            • @Serinus
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              1 year ago

              Context for your second claim. 11% is more precise.

              I’d be in favor of a hefty meat tax. But it’d be wildly unpopular.

              • @oddityoverseer
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                41 year ago

                Thank you for that image. “big portion” is a bit vague, and this does clarify it. To me, 11% is quite a lot of that pie, when you think about:

                • Electricity is becoming greener every day due to solar and wind being cheaper than oil and gas
                • Transportation is getting greener via EVs
                • Industry is getting a focus from people trying to create green concrete and steel

                Here’s another chart that breaks down that agriculture portion. My understanding is methane is mostly due to cow farts, and nitrous oxide is mostly due to animal urine and fertilizers.

                We need to make impacts in all of these sectors, if we’re going to fix climate change.

                Re: meat tax, we could start by just not subsidizing meat and dairy.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      101 year ago

      I’m not a vegetarian, but I try to replace meat with plant based products when possible. I also avoid leather. In modern times I’ve discovered so many negative things about it. The main thing is livestock farming uses literally ten times more resources and creates ten times more pollution than crop farming. Also the the industrial farming of livestock is amazingly cruel.

    • @EhList
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      1 year ago

      deleted by creator

      • Jerkface (any/all)
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        1 year ago

        All the creatures we create are our children. They are all owed the unconditional love and protection of their creator. The experiences of animals are real and matter. Their suffering is identical in nature to your own. It harms us when we take pleasure in cruelty and violence.

        Incidentally, just as a matter of nomenclature, what you are describing is not veganism. The environmental and personal health consequences of veganism are incidental. Veganism is about recognizing the right of all sentient creatures to exist without cruelty and unnecessary violence. You can’t do that one day a week any more than you can believe women are not property one day a week. You’d describe the diet without other connotations as “plant based”.

      • @Feathercrown
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        11 year ago

        Still not as much as eg. the energy sector

        • @EhList
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          1 year ago

          deleted by creator

    • @tallwookie
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      -61 year ago

      you have to take vitamin supplements on a fully vegetarian diet though - there are some nutrients that you just can’t get from eating 2k-calories of plants a day.

      children also shouldn’t be forced into a plant based diet, it’s not good for them, they won’t develop properly - as an example, look at your average North Korean.

      • @Serinus
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        21 year ago

        Absolutely not. For protein you need like… beans. It’s not that difficult. It’s fine for kids, and you absolutely don’t need supplements. Vegan, maybe you do, not vegetarian.

        Half of India is vegetarian. You think they’re all sucking down pills and having short kids?

        • @EhList
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          1 year ago

          deleted by creator

        • @tallwookie
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          21 year ago

          most indians are very short, yes - historically, only their upper castes have been tall

      • Jerkface (any/all)
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        1 year ago

        Everything you just said is wrong. Name these mystery nutrients. The only supplements vegans take are B-12 and D.

        Vegans have better B-12 levels than the general population, who are significantly deficient, despite all the meat they shove down their throats. Everyone should be taking B-12 supplements. That’s how it gets into the meat in the first place. Livestock don’t produce B-12 either! Just grow up and take the pill instead of wrapping it in the flesh of an intelligent creature that at one time had the capacity to love you before you murdered it.

        Have you ever bothered to check your D level? Most people who require D supplements are not vegans!

        Along with your claims about children and North Korea (for some reason) it’s clear that you’re not talking from any kind of informed position, but you’re just saying things that give you a psychological reward for saying them. It’s a defense mechanism. This sort of behaviour is predicted by the theory of carnism.

        • @tallwookie
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          11 year ago

          from your link: “Part of a series on Animal rights”.

          lol no bias there at all, eh?