• CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    I’d eat at McD’s and heck, even Chick-fil-A if they bothered to make something to eat for veg*ns.

    Chick-fil-a piloted that cauliflower and that was actually pretty good, but I don’t think they kept it.

    It might be me, but the “red” options seems to trend toward the Standard American Diet’s most harmful versions of things. That very much tracks with what I noticed while growing up in an extremely red area - there seems to be a lot of male toxicity (among females, too) leading people to think that eating “manly” foods (read: foods that cause diabetes, cancer, and heart disease - it has to involve lots of dead flesh and dairy, because that’s “healthy”, lol) was just what god’s people should be doing, because Jesus, the Bible, the flag, guns, and the Constitution, or something. And no, it doesn’t make any sense - it’s 100% emotionalism of the amgydalites. Allah forbid anyone should eat a vegetable that isn’t deep-fried or is a freedom fry or mashed potatoes…

    • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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      21 days ago

      I don’t need toxic masculinity (or Jesus, guns, or American flags - don’t have any of those in my life) to know steak and bacon and hamburgers are freaking delicious and I want to eat them a lot. I enjoy lots of other things, too. It’s a rare meal I don’t have some kind of meat, but I love crab and fish and chicken as much as red meat.

      I suspect the correlation is more that if you can’t have empathy for your fellow humans, you damn sure can’t for animals. And I’ve never known a vegan who wasn’t driven solely by cruelty to animals.

      I don’t have anything against vegans, and if the food was tastier than bacon and Ribeyes despite the lack of butter and cheese, I might choose it. But here we are. Maybe vat-grown meat will turn out. I’m not thrilled about how animals are treated, but I’m gonna omnivore.

      • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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        21 days ago

        I don’t need toxic masculinity (or Jesus, guns, or American flags - don’t have any of those in my life) to know steak and bacon and hamburgers are freaking delicious and I want to eat them a lot. I enjoy lots of other things, too. It’s a rare meal I don’t have some kind of meat, but I love crab and fish and chicken as much as red meat.

        I was talking more about the people that consider their food part of their very identity. The types that toss around silly things like “soy boy” and think that consuming massive quantities of meat and dairy is part of being a “real” man [1] and so on. I’ve seen people do this even when they tell me their doctor tells them they have got to stop eating red meat (at least) altogether or drastically cut it down. They think eating fresh fruits and vegetables is going to emasculate them. They’d rather continue on this performative path of SAD eating that is literally killing them rather than giving the appearance of being liberal or - gasp - caring about animal welfare.

        If you are eating these kinds of things because you find them tasty - hey, have at it. I’m talking about people that feel that they must consume meat/dairy in order to sustain some notion of themselves because of the culture they have chosen to steep themselves in. LOL, then there are the types that want to argue with me and tell me that if I don’t eat meat, I’m going to die…I have no idea where to even start w/ these people.

        [1] I’ve seen women just as susceptible to this, by the way. There is a lot of toxic masculinity that runs very deep when it comes to nutrition and health…

        • MagicShel@lemmy.zip
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          20 days ago

          That’s fair. Guess I was half defensive but also tying the identity party to their overall lack of empathy which is broadcasted all over the rest of their identity as well. Fuck you for caring sort of thing.

          I probably could’ve focused more on the later and less on the former.

      • usernamesAreTricky@lemmy.ml
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        21 days ago

        You’d be suprised at what you can find out there that are better than you’d think

        Like for example, I’ve had many oat milk skeptics turn into oat milk enthusiasts

        Or if you like cooking, there’s so many great things out there. Ethiopian cuisine for instance has a bunch of traditionally vegan dishes

        Just a handful of examples but there’s so much more out there

        • CharlesDarwin@lemmy.world
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          21 days ago

          This. Since I’ve dropped the omnivore thing, I found my food is far, far tastier now, and has much more variation in flavor, as a general rule. Depends on who is doing the cooking, I guess.

          There are some omnivores that think eating something without meat at the core of it has to taste terrible.

      • Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world
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        20 days ago

        And I’ve never known a vegan who wasn’t driven solely by cruelty to animals.

        There are a lot of reasons that people go vegan. My ex went vegan for environmental reasons. Some people do it primarily for their own health. Some just plain aren’t fans of meat and animal products, through either taste or texture or both.

        But you’re probably right about the correlation with a lack of empathy. When it’s considered “masculine” to not care about hurting others, a lot of folks who only know about the “animal cruelty” aspect probably won’t consider any deeper reasons. They and their ilk stick to surface-level appearances, making it not only important that they keep eating meat, but that they make a big deal about it whenever around someone who doesn’t eat meat.