LemmysMum, (edited )

Don’t give a fuck. Tax the rich, then we can worry about what I eat.

Veganism is class warfare.

ericbomb,

I don’t think you understand what class warfare is.

The fact that it’s co-opted by rich people as trying to convince you that environmental disasters they cause is your problem doesn’t change any points made by actual vegans, or the fact that it’s far far cheaper. Even with all the subsidies given out, a pound of black beans/lentils has more calories/protein than a pound of beef, and will cost 1/5 the price. Sure if I want to splurge and buy a premade veggie burger it’s more expensive, but generally it’s just way more affordable.

LemmysMum, (edited )

I think you’re ignoring the general capacity for vegans to maintain nutritionally complete diets without supplements.

And last time I checked, the rich don’t concern themselves with the cost of nutrition. You’re so deep in the class warfare you can’t even see the front lines.

ericbomb,

B12 is the only thing, and we can buy food that reinforced with it so no big deal. Many cereals have it added, and this can not be overstated, it’s the only thing that is problematic for vegans naturally. I’m not even a vegan, but B12 is added to all sorts of foods these days.

Also if that’s the case, then eating meat is class warfare. While people are starving, we are growing food to feed to live stock, to get a food people think tastes better. For every 1000 calories of food fed to cattle, you’ll get less than 100 calories of meat. There is not enough land on the planet for every person to eat meat the way folks in the US do.

globalagriculture.org/…/meat-and-animal-feed.html…. "Nearly 60% of the world’s agricultural land is used for beef production, yet beef accounts for less than 2% of the calories that are consumed throughout the world. "

That 60% is counting all the corn and soy agriculture that is fed straight to beef. The world is not big enough for humans to eat as much as meat as people do. As a delicacy? Sure. But eating it every day? Multiple meals? Part of the world will always starve if we do. There is nothing in meat that we can’t get in other ways, not a single thing. So in all honesty if we want a stable world, we will need to figure out our addiction to meat.

LemmysMum, (edited )

That’s a lot of words to miss the point.

Also, choline. Also, numerous micronutrients. Also, nutrient density and bioavailability. Also, non-arable grazing land makes up a large part of that 60% (see Australia). Also, locally sustainable nutrient complete. Also, not subject to needing supplementation from foods only available due to international commerce. Also, where do you think they grow the crops for extracting nutrients for supplements? Also, meat is the battery mass storage of the food world, you can charge it up, it’s portable, easy to keep, won’t spoil until harvested.

But go on, tell me again how the poor have access to nutrition and that it’s not class warfare. Starvation must suck on a full stomach.

ericbomb,

Literally every single thing you said is just factually wrong.

Choline is bountiful and not a concern www.pcrm.org/news/…/clearing-choline-confusion. “Micronutrients” I’d love to know which ones. B12 also is in some vegetables, but vegetarians/vegans like to take the supplements just because it’s the only one they “might” not get enough of.

Most of that 60% is used for growing corn and soy used to feed live stock, because letting them graze is inefficient. The vast majority of animals butchered for meat are from factory farms, which are powered by corn and soy. Which could have just been human grown soy and sweetcorn, but instead it makes more money to grow cattle grade. sentienceinstitute.org/us-factory-farming-estimat…

Also they don’t just keep fully grown beef cattle sitting around my friend. They slaughter them on a tight schedule to maximize profit. They don’t function as batteries, they are treated as crops in factories where they are born and die on an optimal schedule. Keeping around a full grown cow marked for beef is a GIANT waste of money, because it needs food, water, and housing despite not going to grow much bigger.

ams.usda.gov/…/slaughter-cattle-grades-and-standa…

And if meat is the food storage of the world how is it a measly 2% of calories consumed? It feeds next to no one. If it vanished, people would moan and grown, but basically no one would go hungry because it feeds just SO few people on the grand scheme of thing. In fact, if all cows vanished, we’d have vastly more food as the vast amounts of corn, grain, and soy that were going to be fed to cows at a 10:1 return would be sold to people, and instead of growing feed corn the next harvest would be food humans actually like.

I just can not stress enough that they eat 20X as many calories, most of which was grown in fields that could have been from humans, as they provide when eaten. The idea that they are grazing, just simply isn’t true. Letting them graze is an inefficient use of land. cbey.yale.edu/our-stories/disrupting-meat

Not to mention you complain that it’s only available due to international commerce… yet many countries import meat as well. beef2live.com/story-world-beef-imports-ranking-co….

You’re right, it is class warfare, rich countries should stop eating meat and instead focus fields on crops that are 20X more efficient until everyone has more food than they can possibly eat. www.arktide.org/how-much-food-can-we-grow/#:~:tex….

I’d be down for pescatarians though if we actually got around to taking care of the oceans and doing sustainable farming.

If you can’t provide sources in a response I will just have to ignore as a troll though. Because every point you made was just… factually incorrect. I’m hoping you just heard those things somewhere else and repeated them without checking and didn’t make them up to be a bother.

LemmysMum,

Choline is bountiful and not a concern “Micronutrients” I’d love to know which ones

It’s been common knowledge for decades that maintaining a nutritionally balanced vegan or vegetarian diet is not as simple as just eliminating meat as doing so causes a severe lack of several key nutrients and vitamins. The main offenders are vitamin B12, Omega 3, vitamin D, Zinc, and Choline. Some of these can be accounted for by increasing variety in the diet but others require supplements for a multitude of reasons, either recommended daily consumption cannot be met due to self imposed dietary restrictions, a lack of nutritionally rich sources, or simply how much food you can eat.

www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8746448/
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7073751/
www.sciencedirect.com/…/S0261561420306567
www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/15/9/2129

Nutritional deficiencies caused by incorrectly managed vegan diets are why doctors in Italy and Belgium are pushing for it to become illegal to feed children vegan diets, because the number of malnourished and dead children of vegan parents are rising in those nations.

www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-37034619
telegraph.co.uk/…/parents-raise-children-vegans-s…

Choline is a nutrient that was identified in the 1800’s but wasn’t known as essential to human development until the late 90’s, it’s found primarily in animal protein and severely impacts brain development in young children and has ongoing effects on mental capability and brain function during adulthood and deficiencies have been linked to multiple memory related diseases. According to nutritional data from the US National Institute of Health on Choline density in foods a vegan would have to consume two and a half cups of soybeans every day to meet minimum RDI for an adult as opposed to 300g of animal protein. The next nearest vegan source of choline is chickpeas which have 50% lower Choline density than soybeans (5 cups a day to meet RDI!)

www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4422379/
ods.od.nih.gov/…/Choline-HealthProfessional/

And if meat is the food storage of the world how is it a measly 2% of calories consumed?

Source? Are those numbers including livestock consumption of non-meat products? Pet consumption of meat products? You bitch about not sourcing information when none were requested then drop that bullshit with no source?

I just can not stress enough that they eat 20X as many calories that could have been from humans.

Whole soy beans make up less than 6% of an American production cow’s diet, they can’t handle more, the rest is made up from industrial food waste such as soybean meal from soymilk production, beet pulp from sugar production, cotton seeds from clothes production, brewers grains from alcohol production, citrus pulp from fruit production, corn gluten from corn syrup production, candy and bakery waste. Numbers from non waste food consumption in cows is as low as 2-3%.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cattle_feeding
nre.tas.gov.au/Documents/cattlefeed.pdf

The idea that they are grazing, just simply isn’t true. Letting them graze is an inefficient use of land.

…gov.au/…/national-factsheet-farm-practices-grazi…
…com.au/…/just-3-of-australias-land-mass-is-suita…
wwf.org.au/what-we-do/food/beef/
csiro.au/…/grazing-systems-in-sustainable-food-fu…
climateworkscentre.org/…/australias-land-use/
era.daf.qld.gov.au/id/eprint/4249/
…org.au/…/regenerativerangelands/
…gov.au/…/grazing-native-vegetation-and-revegetat…
…gov.au/…/ARI-Technical-Report-252-Understanding-…

Not to mention you complain that it’s only available due to international commerce… yet many countries import meat as well

Which has higher caloric density and thus is more environmentally sustainable than transporting the same nutritional value in produce. It’s like you want to burn more fossil fuels in the shipping industry than necessary.

You’re right, it is class warfare, rich countries should stop eating meat and instead focus fields on crops that are 20X more efficient until everyone has more food than they can possibly eat.

Crop management, pesticides, and harvesting kill far more animals of varying species for the same equivalent nutritional value of a single head of cattle. Animals are also often raised on land that can’t be used for crops turning useless land into sustainable food resources, here in Australia over 70% of all our cattle are grass fed on non-arable land that can’t be used for farming crops and that soil health requires both crop rotation and animal biodiversity otherwise you’re not going to be able to grow vegetables there for long. The only reason a healthy nutritionally balanced vegan or vegetarian diet is even remotely possible is due to globalised trade and access to internationally produced and shipped vegetables. To maintain a nutritionally complete vegan diet for an individual year round actually requires far more use of fossil fuels and directly released carbon emissions due to limited seasonality and local accessibility than a cow produces for the same nutrient density and complexity locally.

Here’s a “fun” fact, first world demand for fruit and grain variety has out priced primary sources of food for local populations in third world countries including things like lentils, quinoa, and avocados.

sbs.com.au/…/ordering-the-vegetarian-meal-there-s…
independent.co.uk/…/veganism-environment-veganuar…
theguardian.com/…/vegans-stomach-unpalatable-trut…
thetab.com/…/tofu-vegan-food-staple-bad-for-the-e…

If you can’t provide sources in a response I will just have to ignore as a troll though. Because every point you made was just… factually incorrect. I’m hoping you just heard those things somewhere else and repeated them without checking and didn’t make them up to be a bother.

If self-awareness was a disease, you’d be the healthiest person alive.

naevaTheRat,
@naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

TIL i’m dead

LemmysMum,

Hopefully only between the ears.

Resonosity,

Not arguing with you, but I wanted to contribute by saying that most people, at least in the US, are also deficient in magnesium, zinc, and vitamin D. For all this effort carnivores are putting into to convince others that their diets are sufficient, often times those making those claims haven’t looked inward to see what they themselves are lacking. Perhaps it’s a complex issue, dunno

papaskeks,

Omnivores*

ericbomb,

That is a wonderful point!

I actually ran into someone with big conspiracy energy at a food expo the other day, and he like started ranting about how the government has proven that it’s more interested in promoting what food pays the most in lobbying over actually caring about our health and it’s like… bro you are channeling some major conspiracy theory vibes but I can’t at all argue with your point. Between the food pyramid being drawn up by farmer lobbyists, corn syrup being put into everything despite it poisoning the lower class, and corps only getting a slap on the wrist when they make false food claims… it’s pretty obvious the government isn’t super concerned with our actual well being with our diets and we should all make sure to look inward.

silentTeee,
@silentTeee@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

It’s funny you mention this, because a few days ago I went to my local market to grab milk, and the regular milk was more expensive that the plant-based milk…never thought I’d see this day in the US!

negativeyoda,

My favorite is that a a celiac, all the gluten free stuff is 20% more expensive. Because you know, rice and tapioca are such expensive, exotic ingredients

Fades,

Just another toxic ad FUCK capitalist system. Fuck the planet they got quarterly profits to beat!!

salvador,

“May as well” – how about October, March and August?

ThePenitentOne,

Absolutely fucked up that your taxes go to supporting animal abuse whether you like it or not. Although, arguably worse is how many people don't even give the animals' suffering a second thought and just take the selfish path. Even fucking stupider is that chicken can be bought at the same price as tofu per kg. Like what the shit? Stop subsidising it. It's environmentally destructive and incredibly immoral.

nodsocket,

I’ve always thought that vegan activists would be a lot more successful if they could end these meat subsidies, instead of harassing the public. If the price of meat triples no one is going to be eating meat regardless of their politics.

clanginator,

Yeah but good luck getting anything passed when the GOP and all of the animal agriculture lobbying industry will be screaming from the rooftops about how everyone’s favorite foods will be more expensive.

nodsocket,

“THEY’RE TAKIN AWAY OUR BERGERS!”

Fiivemacs,

That’s exactly the reason this would never happen. The outrage would be uncontrollable.

ThePenitentOne,

Forcing people to do something is easier than making them change wilfully. But people still should have the moral integrity to make the right choice regardless. Plus, people are so propagandised and indoctrinated by the industry from politicians and other bullshit that it would be an incredibly hard battle to fight.

Ataraxia,

Change zoning laws so I can raise my own in my backyard other than just chickens. I have no problem raising and slaughtering my food. No need for factory farms.

Fiivemacs,

Incoming pitbull-bull hybrids

LemmysMum,

How about we all raise our own cattle.

Since we can’t modify suburbia to accommodate that many cattle let alone the additional waste, how about we make specially designated places where we can send all our cows to live.

And since everyone travelling back and forth to look after their cattle would be highly impractical how about we designate a handful of individuals to care for all of the cattle so everyone else can worry about their other jobs.

And since it’s difficult for a single family to store and consume a whole cow, how about we designate a group of people to slaughter and process them into more manageable pieces.

And since everyone going to one place to get their meat and somewhere else to get the rest of their produce, how about we just sell them in one place together.

It’s almost like we know how this works out and should just improve the regulations around caring for our food while it’s alive.

Smoogs,

Depends. If you are eating non processed vegetables the costs goes way below even burgers.

teuniac_,

And beans. And lentils. And peas.

Also, opting for the burger options doesn’t have to mean eating a huge quantity of them.

nodsocket,

You can make vegan bean burgers for way less money than beef. A can of beans, flax seeds, bread crumbs, garlic and an onion are all you need.

ericbomb,

Oh yeah for sure! Just sometimes I wanna go to a place and order a similar looking thing as the people around me without paying a ton more XD

waow,

Why is vegan lingo so infantile? Veggies. You can cram you veggies up your asshole. I’m having a burger.

zalgotext,

Really? That’s the angle you’re going for? Lmao you’re offended by the word “veggies”, a word nearly universally used by nearly every English speaker? Uh oh, looks like your fragile masculinity is showing

waow,

my masculinity is big and hard

can,

Tons of people say veggies. Including meat eaters.

TheOakTree, (edited )

I also think it’s worth noting that the meme says “veggie burgers.”

I don’t think I’ve ever seenveggie burgers, vegan restaurant or not, labelled as “vegetable burgers.” Dude wanted to be upset just to be upset lmao.

Nioxic,

Beef is more nutritious though.

So giving subsidies for that means more people can afford good nutritious food.

Blackrook7,

I read that veggie burgers/ processed vegetarian foods have more human DNA in them than traditional options. Plus beef is delicious and nutritious.

Pipoca,

If you knead bread by hand, it’ll have some human DNA in it from e.g your skin cells. It’s almost impossible to cook or process food while preventing it from getting literally any human cells into it, because humans are shedding cells and DNA literally all the time. You can wear gloves, hairnets, and frequently mop up, but eliminating the problem entirely is hard.

Both a vegetarian burger and a beef burger are probably going to have more human DNA in it than either a steak or a pot of black beans would.

Omega_Haxors,

Never say America can’t afford to feed its people. It can, it just prefers to prop up failing and immoral industry instead.

KingThrillgore,
@KingThrillgore@lemmy.ml avatar

It can afford to feed rich people.

snausagesinablanket,
@snausagesinablanket@lemmy.world avatar

It can afford to feed rich people. Exactly.

Feeding and eating well are two different things.

Nastybutler,

Corn farmers have entered the chat

ericbomb,

Sorry corn farmers, this is about people food. Growing fuel doesn’t really count.

Growing corn that is only usable as animal feed counts as part of how beef industry is being propped up by the government.

So yeah… I think only one or two corn farmers will be left in the chat after that.

1847953620,

I think they were referring to corn subsidies

buzz86us,

We need to fully remove subsidies on corn… Hemp is a full replacement that offers far more uses… AND it makes great fabrics to further reduce the use of polyester

Grumpy,

They’re all referring to corn subsidies.

If you grow corn with subsidy and then sell that corn as livestock feed to cows, then you’ve indirectly further subsidized beef.

Though… this viewpoint is partly misleading people. Corn stalks and pith which humans can’t eat and need ruminant animals to process is what gets fed to them. We don’t always feed corn kernels to cows en masse, though many farms do. If they can find a buyer for the kernel for other consumption (human, fructose syrup, etc), they will sell it that way as it is more profitable. So even if it wasn’t subsidized and we only produce high priced corn for humans, we’d still feed the stalks and pith to cows.

ericbomb,

Correct, but the vast majority of corn subsidies are to grow corn not meant for humans to eat. They are to grow animal feed, or ethanol.

So the first category I count as subsidizing the meat industry, since it exists purely to make raising live stock cheaper. The second category doesn’t really impact food.

BonfireOvDreams,
@BonfireOvDreams@lemmy.world avatar

May as well not considering willful complicity in their deaths is wrong.

ericbomb,

Oh well yes.

If it wasn’t obvious I’m a raging vegetarian. Just annoying.

BonfireOvDreams, (edited )
@BonfireOvDreams@lemmy.world avatar
ericbomb,

I like honey and saying I’m a vegan while eating honey makes some vegans mad.

Posting pictures like that to vegetarians is like no one likes us.

BonfireOvDreams, (edited )
@BonfireOvDreams@lemmy.world avatar

I’d agree that it’s not. What about honey makes you feel like you need it or otherwise that it is somehow different than eating other animal products? If you use it just because you like it, you could argue the same for any other animal product. I’m primarily concerned with their lack of consent, in some cases the clipping of queen bee wings & confinement to a fixed space, & resource theft. There’s also the concerns of native bee populations being unable to compete with honey bees.

Hello_there,

Reminder that farmers can spend something like a dollar per cow per year to allow their cattle to roam through public lands to cause erosion, shit in streams, spread giardia, and give farmers reasons to kill coyotes and wolves.

Potatos_are_not_friends,

Also a shame that cow farts emit a lot of methane.

Freylint,

The solution to bovine methane emissions is to install a cowalitic converter inside their mufflers. Just like we do with quad udder milk exhaust collectors.

KingOfNexus,

On a serious note i read a while back that they are looking into a type of gut bacteria to give to cows which will significantly reduce the methane produced by the cows digestive system.

1847953620,

Send it.

Smoogs,

And how much more water goes into growing meat

Miqo,

They surpsingly release most methane through burping, not farting. Even more surprising is that they burp so much methane that it is measurable from space

Edit: boost isn’t displaying links with custom titles. Here it is: www.cnn.com/2022/04/30/us/…/index.html

Potatos_are_not_friends,

Thats crazy. We need cow filters on all the holes.

scottywh,

While this is true, BLM land doesn’t exist everywhere and as such it isn’t true of all cattle farmers.

The_v,

This is mostly done in the western U.S. It also takes around 40 acres of land/cow. In drier areas it takes 200 acres per cow.

In an irrigated field, with annual crops, and rotational grazing, we can feed 2-4 cows/acre depending on the location.

We do not need to use 95% of the land we use for pasture.

Jelly_mcPB,

These numbers are highly inflated

The_v,

A 1,200 lb lactating beef animal needs around 3% of it’s body mass every day. So around 35lbs of dry matter forage per day. Works out to around 6.4 tons DM/year.

Under irrigation, In areas without freezing temps, 25tons DM/acre is possible (not easy) or 4 cows. In areas with freezing temps 12-15 tons DM/acre can be accomplished or 2 cows (1 cow if the growing season is short)

10-15" rainfall zone produces around 600lbs DM/acre of which around 50% is available (timing issue) this is around 0.15 tons DM/acre. 6.4 tons DM for one cow is around 43 acres.

In a 5-10" rainfall zone it reduces to under 200lbs DM/acre total. Or 0.05 tons DM/acre or around 128 acres per cow. With that much walking their energy needs increase by as much as 50%. Or around 200 acres/cow.

Guess who grew up on a ranch with BLM grazing ground :-) My grandfather decided going bankrupt was a better than listening to a younger more hotheaded me.

Jelly_mcPB,

Cool cool cool, guess who grew up in Texas around 100 ranches? You aren’t accounting for how many times / much hay can be harvested from an acre of land, especially when you are talking about bahaia. While it may cost you a little more, to transport it to northern states its not 100 acres per cow. If your grandfather was a rancher, he definitely isn’t taking his cues from one granddaughter, especially if that’s how he raised your parent. We are a omnivores. We can get everything we need from both plant and animals, but as far as full chain amino acids- proteins, it is far more efficient from animals. The sad thing is we import a lot of meat, oddly enough from countries that don’t have near the land mass, and more people per acre than we have here and less regulation on how said how the meat was raised, so tell me if it take 100 acres of land to raise 1 head of cattle is possible?

The_v,

Well that settles it. You too ignorant on the subject to make a coherent reply.

Jelly_mcPB,

Hey mathematician, there are nearly 40 million cows in the US between beef and dairy, times that by 100 hundred, and that means we would need 4 billion acres to sustain them. There is only 2.4 in all of America. You dolt.

The_v,

Lol. A swing and a miss. Not even close to what I said. Try again. Since your from, Texas perhaps your should see a Dr about concussive brain trauma.

Here’s a hint. Divide 40million by 2 cows per acre and you get 20 million. That’s about how many acres we need to use to feed every cow in the U.S under irrigated annual crops production. Instead we use around 800 million acres (grassland plus forest).

So 97.5% of the land are we are using to graze cows, we don’t need to use. We do it because the government subsidizes archaic agricultural practices and makes it affordable.

Jelly_mcPB,

Read your first comment goober. You said it takes 40 to 200 acres per cow depending on the climate. SMH.

TxTechnician,

Large heards grazing is necessary for grasslands to thrive.

They till the ground, knock down tall dead plants, graze (but not “browse” the grass), fertilize, and water the grass.

Deer and other fauna do not knock down the grass the way bovine do. We used to have millions of Buffalo. Now we use cattle as a substitute.

If we don’t do that, we have to burn the grassland. Or it dies.

That’s what we used to do in Kansas. It was quite fun. And the government paid us to do it.

Anyways. Here’s some evidence to back up what I’m saying: TED TALK

Hello_there,

In some places, sure. But not everywhere they are. And you could/should reintroduce bison where they can go instead of using cattle. And the government should get more than the pittance they get per head.

TvanBuuren,

Here it’s not just that.

The raw resources and production costs of oat milk is like, €0.30 per 2 liter.

They sell it at €2.40.

Healthy is capitalism here.

tja,
@tja@sh.itjust.works avatar

I believe they also put a lot of resources into research

ForgotAboutDre,

Oat milk is just oats blended in water. The research is minimal. The marketing is where they put most of their money.

jasondj,

Most retail nut milk is actually mixed with a variety of gums and other texture enhancers.

Fresh, homemade oat milk is actually really easy to make by that process, but store-bought oat milk needs to have consistent flavor and texture/mouth-feel. So there is a bit more that goes into it.

This is also true of other non-dairy milks. That’s why I only use Trader Joe’s or Westsoy shelf-stable soy milk for making yogurt. No gums.

ForgotAboutDre,

These are industry standard additives, that are trivial to develop recipes for. The research involved is minimal, and wouldn’t represent a significant portion of the business.

Blackmist,

Plus vegans will pay anything in order to imagine themselves as being better than meat eaters.

ForgotAboutDre,

I don’t think this is the case. Vegans are likely to spend less money on food.

ILikeBoobies,

Jokes on them, I’ll still only refer to it as oatmeal

tja,
@tja@sh.itjust.works avatar

I think there is a huge difference in the thing you are describing and e.g the oatly barista.

There are a lot of oat milks that taste very different or not at all. To get the right taste and consistency, you need some research.

zalgotext,

You’re the only one talking about niche/specialty products though. Not denying that those products require extensive research, but I doubt that those products alone are responsible for the considerable markup on the typical alternative milk products, which truly are closer to “oats blended in water”, and probably make up a majority of sales.

x4740N,
@x4740N@lemmy.world avatar

Doesn’t production of not milk use a ton of water and have am environmental impact

One of the trends I have noticed with vegan users online is that they neglect to mention the environmental impacts of their own alternative products

lnee,

Yes I could stop eating a pound a day but keto and vegetarian don’t mix well

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