Vegan gone unvegan because of bone broth craze?
Replies
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angelexperiment wrote: »Evidently all the vegans who gave up veganism for the broth said that their nutritional deficiencies were met by consuming the bone broth as it is high in cartilage, callogen and other nutrients that could not be met ( or at least for them). They were all very long time vegans ( which I would assume they would know where and how to get nutrients but I guess that's my assumption)
I do not really understand that perspective unless you were really ill from improper nutritional standpoint and felt this was what your body needed. But I don't see how you could bring yourself to do it ( bc it involves bones and marrow and fats of animal or something) and I read it tastes quite awful initially and I could imagine the smell.
Could a nutritional deficiency be that dire? I have read of vegans with really bad deficiencies after so many years of veganism ( 15 + years) but could that not be avoided with proper supplements or fixed?
As a new vegan I seek to be as informed as possible and learn all I can. I kept seeing these new bone broth diet type books wondering is there something to it? Some miracle nutrients? It flitted across my mind would one or should one relinquish their veganism for it? Then I started to google it and came across vegan version and vegans crossed over to this bone broth deal. My conclusion is I believe you could find these nutrients as a vegan, at the very least supplement any deficit and do you nutritional homework to get everything you need.
you can, fairly easily find these nutrients provided you look up some common food sources of them, find supplemented food such as any kind of nut milk in (in the US all items marketed as milk are required to be supplemented with vitD at a minimum), or the readily available sources of vegan supplements available to the modern person at reasonable prices.
It's not hard provided they take the time to educate themselves.
@angelexperiment did I ever give you the nutrition page I tend to give new vegans? It's a bit to digest but it's an ok starting point to educate about specific nutrients that are most common to require attention?
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angelexperiment wrote: »I'm interested if this has occurred to any long time vegans? There is this bone broth craze going on and apparently there are longtime vegans jumping on the cartilage benefit train!
I see you can have vegan bone broth ( without bones) with the same benefits as the bone broth.
I just wondered had anyone switched to no vegan for bone broth and why? I found it to be interesting and read many blogs of long time vegans (15+ years) gone non vegan bc of bone broth. I wanted to see what is the deal?angelexperiment wrote: »I'm interested if this has occurred to any long time vegans? There is this bone broth craze going on and apparently there are longtime vegans jumping on the cartilage benefit train!
I see you can have vegan bone broth ( without bones) with the same benefits as the bone broth.
I just wondered had anyone switched to no vegan for bone broth and why? I found it to be interesting and read many blogs of long time vegans (15+ years) gone non vegan bc of bone broth. I wanted to see what is the deal?
Yah REAL vegans aren't jumping off I promise.0 -
Christine_72 wrote: »mean_and_lean wrote: »Isn't that just stock?
Yeah, but I think you need to cook it for for 24-36 hours straight, so the Gelatin and such leeches out
Again, just regular old stock. I make it all the time. No magical properties to it but it does add flavor to a lot of things. I suppose calling it "bone broth" instead of "stock" makes it seem more fancy and cool?0 -
angelexperiment wrote: »I'm interested if this has occurred to any long time vegans? There is this bone broth craze going on and apparently there are longtime vegans jumping on the cartilage benefit train!
I see you can have vegan bone broth ( without bones) with the same benefits as the bone broth.
I just wondered had anyone switched to no vegan for bone broth and why? I found it to be interesting and read many blogs of long time vegans (15+ years) gone non vegan bc of bone broth. I wanted to see what is the deal?angelexperiment wrote: »I'm interested if this has occurred to any long time vegans? There is this bone broth craze going on and apparently there are longtime vegans jumping on the cartilage benefit train!
I see you can have vegan bone broth ( without bones) with the same benefits as the bone broth.
I just wondered had anyone switched to no vegan for bone broth and why? I found it to be interesting and read many blogs of long time vegans (15+ years) gone non vegan bc of bone broth. I wanted to see what is the deal?
Yah REAL vegans aren't jumping off I promise.
Qft
I haven't eaten meat in 34 yrs. Bone broth wouldn't be the thing to change that.0 -
BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
Yeah, I miss the flavors of some animal-based foods, but I wouldn't call the feeling "temptation." I just don't consider them food any more, if that makes sense.0 -
angelexperiment wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »Vegan "bone broth" is what? Just . . .broth?
It's hard for me to imagine someone overcoming an objection to animal exploitation just to consume broth. It seems like just another food trend to me.
Bone Broth - Bone = Vegetable Stock.
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BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
If I were to become vegan, it isn't sushi that would cause me the most problem - there's plenty of sushi types that are vegan that I already like. It probably wouldn't really be the meat or fish, either - though I would definitely miss some of it.
Mainly, it would be things made with eggs, or dairy. For a lot of bakery goods, there just is not a half-way decent substitute.0 -
BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
If I were to become vegan, it isn't sushi that would cause me the most problem - there's plenty of sushi types that are vegan that I already like. It probably wouldn't really be the meat or fish, either - though I would definitely miss some of it.
Mainly, it would be things made with eggs, or dairy. For a lot of bakery goods, there just is not a half-way decent substitute.
Yeah, things are getting better and better every year, but eggs and dairy are at the cornerstone of so many baked goods that there is sometimes a gap.0 -
BecomingBane wrote: »angelexperiment wrote: »Evidently all the vegans who gave up veganism for the broth said that their nutritional deficiencies were met by consuming the bone broth as it is high in cartilage, callogen and other nutrients that could not be met ( or at least for them). They were all very long time vegans ( which I would assume they would know where and how to get nutrients but I guess that's my assumption)
I do not really understand that perspective unless you were really ill from improper nutritional standpoint and felt this was what your body needed. But I don't see how you could bring yourself to do it ( bc it involves bones and marrow and fats of animal or something) and I read it tastes quite awful initially and I could imagine the smell.
Could a nutritional deficiency be that dire? I have read of vegans with really bad deficiencies after so many years of veganism ( 15 + years) but could that not be avoided with proper supplements or fixed?
As a new vegan I seek to be as informed as possible and learn all I can. I kept seeing these new bone broth diet type books wondering is there something to it? Some miracle nutrients? It flitted across my mind would one or should one relinquish their veganism for it? Then I started to google it and came across vegan version and vegans crossed over to this bone broth deal. My conclusion is I believe you could find these nutrients as a vegan, at the very least supplement any deficit and do you nutritional homework to get everything you need.
you can, fairly easily find these nutrients provided you look up some common food sources of them, find supplemented food such as any kind of nut milk in (in the US all items marketed as milk are required to be supplemented with vitD at a minimum), or the readily available sources of vegan supplements available to the modern person at reasonable prices.
It's not hard provided they take the time to educate themselves.
@angelexperiment did I ever give you the nutrition page I tend to give new vegans? It's a bit to digest but it's an ok starting point to educate about specific nutrients that are most common to require attention?
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janejellyroll wrote: »BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
If I were to become vegan, it isn't sushi that would cause me the most problem - there's plenty of sushi types that are vegan that I already like. It probably wouldn't really be the meat or fish, either - though I would definitely miss some of it.
Mainly, it would be things made with eggs, or dairy. For a lot of bakery goods, there just is not a half-way decent substitute.
Yeah, things are getting better and better every year, but eggs and dairy are at the cornerstone of so many baked goods that there is sometimes a gap.
I dunno... my SO and I bake all the time and it's fairly simple to accomplish provided you have experimented with binders to determine the best use/most flavorful binder for each use.
That said, it doesn't taste quite the same, but I don't ever think of things as substitues intended to taste/texture the same... I prefer to think of them as homages, or tributes... not quite accurate recreations or interpretations. It helps with that issue.0 -
BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
If I were to become vegan, it isn't sushi that would cause me the most problem - there's plenty of sushi types that are vegan that I already like. It probably wouldn't really be the meat or fish, either - though I would definitely miss some of it.
Mainly, it would be things made with eggs, or dairy. For a lot of bakery goods, there just is not a half-way decent substitute.
Yeah, things are getting better and better every year, but eggs and dairy are at the cornerstone of so many baked goods that there is sometimes a gap.
I dunno... my SO and I bake all the time and it's fairly simple to accomplish provided you have experimented with binders to determine the best use/most flavorful binder for each use.
That said, it doesn't taste quite the same, but I don't ever think of things as substitues intended to taste/texture the same... I prefer to think of them as homages, or tributes... not quite accurate recreations or interpretations. It helps with that issue.
I also bake frequently. I haven't yet found a really good substitute for pastry cream/custard. If you have something to suggest, send it my way!0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
If I were to become vegan, it isn't sushi that would cause me the most problem - there's plenty of sushi types that are vegan that I already like. It probably wouldn't really be the meat or fish, either - though I would definitely miss some of it.
Mainly, it would be things made with eggs, or dairy. For a lot of bakery goods, there just is not a half-way decent substitute.
Yeah, things are getting better and better every year, but eggs and dairy are at the cornerstone of so many baked goods that there is sometimes a gap.
I dunno... my SO and I bake all the time and it's fairly simple to accomplish provided you have experimented with binders to determine the best use/most flavorful binder for each use.
That said, it doesn't taste quite the same, but I don't ever think of things as substitues intended to taste/texture the same... I prefer to think of them as homages, or tributes... not quite accurate recreations or interpretations. It helps with that issue.
I also bake frequently. I haven't yet found a really good substitute for pastry cream/custard. If you have something to suggest, send it my way!
Unfortunately, that's not something we have experimented with so I don't have any personal advice there. But, here's a recipe that seems feasible.
http://thegrumpysailor.com/2014/09/20/custard-slice/
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BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
If I were to become vegan, it isn't sushi that would cause me the most problem - there's plenty of sushi types that are vegan that I already like. It probably wouldn't really be the meat or fish, either - though I would definitely miss some of it.
Mainly, it would be things made with eggs, or dairy. For a lot of bakery goods, there just is not a half-way decent substitute.
Yeah, things are getting better and better every year, but eggs and dairy are at the cornerstone of so many baked goods that there is sometimes a gap.
I dunno... my SO and I bake all the time and it's fairly simple to accomplish provided you have experimented with binders to determine the best use/most flavorful binder for each use.
That said, it doesn't taste quite the same, but I don't ever think of things as substitues intended to taste/texture the same... I prefer to think of them as homages, or tributes... not quite accurate recreations or interpretations. It helps with that issue.
I also bake frequently. I haven't yet found a really good substitute for pastry cream/custard. If you have something to suggest, send it my way!
Unfortunately, that's not something we have experimented with so I don't have any personal advice there. But, here's a recipe that seems feasible.
http://thegrumpysailor.com/2014/09/20/custard-slice/
Thanks!0 -
I'd like to eat (drink) bone broth, but I don't have the equipment/location/patience to cook anything for 48 hrs. I saw some for sale on amazon for ridiculous prices. Bummer.
Some vegans here seem to think everyone went vegan for ethical reasons. I have 2 friends that went vegan purely for health reasons, so this isn't true.
The vegan diet is pretty healthy from a micro-nutrient standpoint, if implemented correctly. The only thing you'd have to supplement to make it as healthy as it would be with meat is B-12. That being said, even if properly implemented special attention needs to be paid to Niacin, Choline and Calcium. Doable, but a bit of a challenge. Of course both vegan and diets with meat are deficient in Vitamin D, so it's best to supplement if you can't get out in the sun on a regular basis.
Personally, I eat about 15% animal products (by calorie) every day. Not only can I get all my micronutrients (except vitamin D) easily, but I also feel safer, since we are discovering new things about nutrition all the time. I think it's a little risky to completely remove animal products from our diets.0 -
leosmith66 wrote: »I'd like to eat (drink) bone broth, but I don't have the equipment/location/patience to cook anything for 48 hrs. I saw some for sale on amazon for ridiculous prices. Bummer.
Some vegans here seem to think everyone went vegan for ethical reasons. I have 2 friends that went vegan purely for health reasons, so this isn't true.
The vegan diet is pretty healthy from a micro-nutrient standpoint, if implemented correctly. The only thing you'd have to supplement to make it as healthy as it would be with meat is B-12. That being said, even if properly implemented special attention needs to be paid to Niacin, Choline and Calcium. Doable, but a bit of a challenge. Of course both vegan and diets with meat are deficient in Vitamin D, so it's best to supplement if you can't get out in the sun on a regular basis.
Personally, I eat about 15% animal products (by calorie) every day. Not only can I get all my micronutrients (except vitamin D) easily, but I also feel safer, since we are discovering new things about nutrition all the time. I think it's a little risky to completely remove animal products from our diets.
People don't give up fur, beeswax candles, leather, wool, animal entertainment, and lanolin in lotion for health reasons. Your friends are on a plant-based diet. Veganism is an ethical position on animal exploitation.0 -
OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
Not everyone is vegan for ethical reasons.0 -
coreyreichle wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
Not everyone is vegan for ethical reasons.
At the risk of repeating myself: People don't give up fur, beeswax candles, leather, wool, animal entertainment, and lanolin in lotion for health reasons. Veganism is an ethical position on animal exploitation.0 -
It's ridiculous. The bone broth is a huge fad among the naturopathics. I went to see a naturopath after I was vegan for a year and had allergies and she told me if I didn't eat meat I would die. LOL I'm still alive and healthier than ever been 5 years later! Another friend of mine with health problems was also told she had to eat bone broth instead of being vegan, and it made her sicker. They misdiagnosed her and she has lymes disease, so eating bone broth did not help in the least.
We can get every nutrient we need from plants. It's highly documented in plenty of studies. Check out nutritionfacts.org. He's a doctor who studies peer reviewed evidence about plant based diets and does videos about them- all of his proceeds go to charity and he is not bought out by any corporations, like other sources are. He might have something about bone broth. Check in his search box.0 -
BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
Huh? Vegan sushi is the best! I eat it all the time!0 -
live2dream wrote: »It's ridiculous. The bone broth is a huge fad among the naturopathics. I went to see a naturopath after I was vegan for a year and had allergies and she told me if I didn't eat meat I would die. LOL I'm still alive and healthier than ever been 5 years later! Another friend of mine with health problems was also told she had to eat bone broth instead of being vegan, and it made her sicker. They misdiagnosed her and she has lymes disease, so eating bone broth did not help in the least.
We can get every nutrient we need from plants. It's highly documented in plenty of studies. Check out nutritionfacts.org. He's a doctor who studies peer reviewed evidence about plant based diets and does videos about them- all of his proceeds go to charity and he is not bought out by any corporations, like other sources are. He might have something about bone broth. Check in his search box.
It doesn't look like that website has any content about bone broth.0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »leosmith66 wrote: »I'd like to eat (drink) bone broth, but I don't have the equipment/location/patience to cook anything for 48 hrs. I saw some for sale on amazon for ridiculous prices. Bummer.
Some vegans here seem to think everyone went vegan for ethical reasons. I have 2 friends that went vegan purely for health reasons, so this isn't true.
The vegan diet is pretty healthy from a micro-nutrient standpoint, if implemented correctly. The only thing you'd have to supplement to make it as healthy as it would be with meat is B-12. That being said, even if properly implemented special attention needs to be paid to Niacin, Choline and Calcium. Doable, but a bit of a challenge. Of course both vegan and diets with meat are deficient in Vitamin D, so it's best to supplement if you can't get out in the sun on a regular basis.
Personally, I eat about 15% animal products (by calorie) every day. Not only can I get all my micronutrients (except vitamin D) easily, but I also feel safer, since we are discovering new things about nutrition all the time. I think it's a little risky to completely remove animal products from our diets.
People don't give up fur, beeswax candles, leather, wool, animal entertainment, and lanolin in lotion for health reasons. Your friends are on a plant-based diet. Veganism is an ethical position on animal exploitation.
I think this distinction is important for lots of reasons, mainly because one is a WoE and the other a Way of Life. To me, those are two different things. The only real contention that I have with that label, though, is the ease of conversation and the level of expectations I can have when having a conversation with someone. It's much easier to give someone advice if I know whether they are a plant based dieter vs ethical vegan as the advice that I give might change based on which label they use.
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live2dream wrote: »BecomingBane wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »OMG seriously?
That's the most ridiculous thing I've ever heard
So you completely renege on an ethical decision that means you have to work hard to ensure adequate nutritional markers are met and your entire life is lived without animal by-products in order to drink soup, which has no discernible scientific benefit above the fact it's soup
Of all the cockamamie things I have ever heard
Calling @BecomingBane and @janejellyroll to comment on this one because I would like to hear their responses
I wouldn't stop being vegan for bacon or custard or lasagna with fresh mozzarella, but at least those things are understandable. For a bowl of broth? No. This just doesn't compute.
the only thing I ever miss is sushi... and while I have fond memories of it, I'm not actually tempted by it.
Huh? Vegan sushi is the best! I eat it all the time!
Yes, I know that, but it's inherently different. Not a value judgement as I'm not saying one is better or worse from a purely flavor standpoint (not talking ethical concerns, here)... just different.0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »People don't give up fur, beeswax candles, leather, wool, animal entertainment, and lanolin in lotion for health reasons. Your friends are on a plant-based diet. Veganism is an ethical position on animal exploitation.
0 -
No, vegan means avoiding animal suffering. If you don't care about that, you are doing a plant based diet.0
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leosmith66 wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »People don't give up fur, beeswax candles, leather, wool, animal entertainment, and lanolin in lotion for health reasons. Your friends are on a plant-based diet. Veganism is an ethical position on animal exploitation.
Name a single reason why someone would eschew all animal based products (not just food) if not for ethical reasons.0 -
For the hell of it?0
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leosmith66 wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »People don't give up fur, beeswax candles, leather, wool, animal entertainment, and lanolin in lotion for health reasons. Your friends are on a plant-based diet. Veganism is an ethical position on animal exploitation.
Veganism is an ethical position. Why would someone adopt an ethical position for reasons unrelated to ethics?
I understand that you aren't arguing against veganism. I'm not even sure why you felt it necessary to point that out as nothing I have said assumes that you are arguing against it.
People can adopt a plant-based diet for a variety of reasons. I believe that may be what you're talking about -- a plant-based diet. If not, can you provide an example of the type of person you're talking about?0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »Vegan "bone broth" is what? Just . . .broth?
It's hard for me to imagine someone overcoming an objection to animal exploitation just to consume broth. It seems like just another food trend to me.
I have a colleague on this crazy train. She has a myriad of health issues and is certain that bone broth will fix them (among other trends/fads/"ideas"...)
And no, it doesn't seem to be working.0 -
janejellyroll wrote: »Veganism is an ethical position.0
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leosmith66 wrote: »janejellyroll wrote: »Veganism is an ethical position.
I'm not sure exactly what you Googled, but the term itself was created to describe people who object to animal exploitation. If people want to change the meaning of the word to mean those who only avoid animal products in food but are okay with animal exploitation, that's their right. But they're taking an word with an established definition and changing it. Resulting confusion is a result of their decision -- not my continuing to use the word to mean what it has always meant.0
This discussion has been closed.
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