• @captainlezbian
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    941 year ago

    That’s both absolutely true and a massive distraction from the point. An environmentally friendly diet that includes meat is going to involve sustainable hunting not factory farming. In comparison an environmentally friendly vegan diet is staples of meat replacements and not trying to get fancy with it. It’s shit like beans instead of meat, tofu and tempeh when you feel fancy. It means rejecting substitutes that are too environmentally costly such as agave nectar as a sweetener (you should probably use beet or cane based sweetener instead).

    So in short eat vegan like a poor vegan not like a rich person who thinks veganism is trendy

    • @[email protected]
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      2 months ago

      “So in short eat vegan like a poor vegan not like a rich person who thinks veganism is trendy”

      But in the context of this conversation, wouldn’t eating like a poor vegan rely heavily on buying products that also have a heavy impact on the environment?

      You would have to buy cheaper products which come from mass produced farms that use TONS and TONS of water! And generate TONS and TONS of carbon emissions during production of those products.

      To be vegan AND advocate for conservation(you can advocate for something no matter your own behavior. That’s the wrong word to use) to claim that your lifestyle is better for the environment than your non-vegan counterparts, you have to have money.

      • @captainlezbian
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        22 months ago

        I ain’t never heard of a gram of black beans with more co2 emissions than a gram of beef