• @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Huh, I wonder why? Let’s see…

    • My rent was raised by ~100€ over the last two years
    • My electricity bill is 30€ higher now, too
    • My food expenses exploded to about an extra 200€ per month, even though I pay more attention to prices now and go for me-too-products whenever I can
    • Not to mention the countless other things that got more expensive (heating, water bills, insurance, clothes etc.)

    Meanwhile, my salary increased by a little more than 100€ in that same time span. And you’re telling me people can’t afford decent meals? Oh I fucking wonder why!

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    Here in Romania, it’s a pretty gigantic price and standard of living difference between the cities and the countryside. I wonder if they took into account the price difference, or they just assigned a national average and compared that to their salaries.

    Also, how would you even do this calculation for a family growing their own food and raising livestock in a village?

    • @febra
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      81 year ago

      Yeah, if you live in the city you pretty much can afford to eat meat on a daily basis. Most people that live in the countryside grow their own chickens, pigs, and so on. They might not be able to buy meat every day based on their income, but that doesn’t mean they aren’t eating meat. They just aren’t buying it. Funnily enough, most Romanians eat meat on a daily basis. Romania has a comparable meat consumption per capita to Estonia, Belgium and Switzerland [1]

      1 - https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_meat_consumption

  • @[email protected]
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    131 year ago

    ELI5: How is it only a “proper” meal if it has meat or meatlike ingredients? What’s wrong with dishes that are plainly vegetarian?

    • @[email protected]
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      281 year ago

      The article already mentions “or a vegetarian equivalent”. Being vegetarian also means you have to have a balanced diet. That’s not easy when you’re poor.

      • @[email protected]
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        51 year ago

        Has anybody had the patience to investigate on the article and find out what is meant by “vegetarian equivalent”? I cannot believe that lentils or beans could be that expensive. Completely different picture for tofu, meat substitutes and the like.

        • @[email protected]
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          21 year ago

          Let’s see getting the recommended dose of B12 implies three eggs or half a litre of milk a day, minimum what 60ct or such. Eggs should be preferred, more and better protein. Package frozen spinach, 80ct, potatoes until you’re full let’s say 500-1000g let’s split the difference another 60ct.

          Two Euros, not counting electricity or odds and ends (such as clarified butter to fry the potatoes (pro tip: ~1cm cubes, fry while steaming, then mash), salt, spices).

          And that’s if a) you’re buying at Aldi in Germany, we have ridiculously low food prices and b) know WTF you’re doing and c) have time and energy to do it. E.g. without a freezer you really shouldn’t keep those spinach packages around. Also no matter how much I love spinach and eggs I wouldn’t want to eat it every day.

          Beans and rice are going to put you into malnutrition sooner or later, lack of micronutrients. The nice thing about meat is that you really won’t have to care about that one.

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            Beans and rice are going to put you into malnutrition sooner or later, lack of micronutrients. The nice thing about meat is that you really won’t have to care about that one.

            If you never switch that up, yes. But fortunately there’s a lot of other cheap plants you can use. So you can avoid most issues by simply switching it up once in a while. And thanks to a long history of improving the seeds soy now has a comparable biological value to eggs (and beasts most meats). Hence those will work well as a start.

            If you’re a woman or lose blood for other reasons, you’ll likely want some iron supplements, but those can be avoided if you really want to.

            B12 however is the one thing you need to take as a supplement if you try to live of plants. So I don’t get why you use mention that. It’s in any vegan-diet starter post and while it’s theoretically possible to obtain enough on a vegetarian diet via milk, consuming that much dairy defeats the purpose of vegetarianism hence most take those pills as well.

            • @[email protected]
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              21 year ago

              Half a litre isn’t really much: A glass with your muesli, a yoghurt for dessert, some sprinkles of cheese somewhere and it’s covered. A litre of milk is about 100g of semi-hard cheese (think gouda), so three slices can get you over the target.

              Cheese and eggs are the foundation of much how peasants not just survived, but survived well, over the last couple of millennia. And those dishes contain all kinds of nutritional details that you have to care about if you want to forego all fish and meat, e.g. Quark, linseed oil and potatoes for that Omega 3 kick if you’re too poor to even have fish (salmon was poor man’s food back in the days…)

              • @[email protected]
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                41 year ago

                Half a litre isn’t really much: A glass with your muesli, a yoghurt for dessert, some sprinkles of cheese somewhere and it’s covered. A litre of milk is about 100g of semi-hard cheese (think gouda), so three slices can get you over the target.

                That’s a lot in terms of animal suffering and environmental damage. Cheese is worse for the climate than beef.

                And given how peasants “survived”, well they didn’t do much more than that. There’s a reason humans only regained their normal size recently. We were much healthier in the stone ages than as peasants. Milk really isn’t particularly healthy and that’s one of the reasons it’s mostly a thing in European and a few populations. Half of the world is still lactose intolerant.

                Basically: Milk had its purpose for a few millennia, but now it’s time to ditch it again.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 year ago

                  I get it you’re vegan. Rest assured that I don’t even buy non-organic milk, if only for the reason that it doesn’t taste good when the cows only eat soy.

                  Malik still prefers most people stick with low-fat dairy, as this helps reduce your intake of saturated fat but still offers good amounts of nutrients.

                  I’m not even going to start commenting on that. The 50s want their commercial propaganda back.

                  Half of the world is still lactose intolerant.

                  Half the world is not culturally and partly genetically descendent from a particular pastoral culture in what’s now Ukraine. You can flip the whole thing around and ask why other cultures didn’t spread as hard and fast as Indo-Europeans did (speaking of initial expansion, not modern-day colonial bullshit).

                  Also, half a litre is still within what non-lactose tolerant people can tolerate. It’s pushing it, but possible. I mean most Italians are lactose intolerant and they still have their cappuccino. Then, lactose doesn’t even begin to be an issue when it comes to even moderately ripened cheeses. India would completely collapse without milk as their version of vegetarian doesn’t involve eggs.


                  If you want to get your B12 from other sources, be my guest. I literally don’t care. If you want to argue against milk consumption for other reasons, also be my guest. All I wanted to do is how “vegetarian substitute for meat” can be interpreted in a European context that’s on a budget. And it didn’t even involve milk because eggs are more bang for the buck nutrition-wise.

        • NotAPenguin
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          -191 year ago

          I tried to figure out what they meant by “vegetarian equivalent” but it’s not clear from the article and the source link seems broken…

      • @[email protected]
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        41 year ago

        It’s indeed not easy. But we’re speaking about one of the cases where you actually can substitute money with knowledge, planning and some effort. Cheap and healthy vegan (not just vegetarian) diets are doable, they just require cooking and looking up what you do. Or at least switching it up a lot.

        • @[email protected]
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          61 year ago

          You are right, it is possible for an individual.

          But this is not about an individual but about a society. Poor people will be less likely to achieve this diet. (Less time, more stress, less education).

          • @[email protected]
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            1 year ago

            True. But continuing to subsidizing meat (without those it would never have been affordable) is the least efficient way to go about it. Saving the money (if we include the environmental costs we’re easily in the hundreds of billions per year for Europe alone) that goes into subsidies for livestock, could pay for a lot of programs that make plant-based healthy eating more widespread. By education, but also by targeted subsidizing of healthy foods.

            Edit: Also: Meat being take off the menu by prices makes it more complicated to obtain amino acids, but it also has a lot of positive side effects. Red meat and especially processed products cause quite a bit of problems. Heck, maybe we should bring back rationing.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 year ago

        But what is actually needed, then? I can 100% assure you that you can survive or even thrive on a diet consisting of nothing but potatoes and beans and a bit of green stuff.

        • @[email protected]
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          51 year ago

          You can assure me how?

          Aside from nutritional value it’s not really feasible for the whole world to only eat potatoes, beans and a bit of green stuff. They will not grow everywhere in sufficient quantities.

          Be noted that I am not advocating eating meat is necessary or healthy the way we do it currently. I was just explaining that you did not read the article carefully.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              That article is dangerous. For one specific reason: It lists what potatoes lack, but that list is incomplete, which is worse than listing no details at all. A healthy adult will have enough e.g. B12 reserves to easily last those two months without real adverse effects but a kid would already be in malnutrition.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              You are already aware of my counter argument, great. Also it’s for 60 days only and a publicity stunt. That’s not really shattering my knowledge about nutrition.

              So you’re saying for Europe is possible?

  • @MetaPhrastes
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    1 year ago

    Is it only me or does anyone else think something has gone wrong with the EU? Shouldn’t it have prevented wars and poverty promoting collaboration and solidarity? Especially for the countries which joined with the 2007 expansion like the ones mentioned in the post, I think their expectations were utterly “betrayed”.

    • bossito 🇪🇺
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      241 year ago

      @MetaPhrastes the EU has been incredibly effective at preventing wars between it’s members, before they were always at war, since the EU never again. And you just need to step out of the EU to see wars…

      You don’t have to be a economist to see how much the Romanian and Bulgarian economies improved since joining. But there are no magic pills, it takes time.

      So yeah, hopefully it’s only you with such a simplistic and alienated view, unfortunately we know you aren’t the only one.

      @boem

    • Xeelee
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      51 year ago

      How do you think Romania and Bulgaria would have done without the EU?

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Even former Eastern Germany still has areas with poverty even though German reunification was close to twice that long ago.

      Now I am not saying everything in that process went as well as one could have hoped for, far from it in fact, but it serves as a point of comparison for what can be expected under real world circumstances that was available around the time those countries made their decision to join the EU.

    • Well, we need to consider where the countries are coming from and where they are at. For the south-eastern countries we need to keep corruption as a major factor in mind too. Wasnt there a croatian eu parliamentarist, who had 600.000 Euros in a sportsbag at home? In Hungary people happily vote for Orban, who tells them the EU is betraying them, while he and his crownies are lining their pockets with EU money meant to develop Hungary.

    • JasSmith
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      11 year ago

      While true, many people enjoy eating meat, and when forced to significantly downgrade their lifestyle, feel resentful towards the system. We don’t need televisions and iPads, but when an economy doesn’t permit people to buy and own these, people can feel resentful.