Vegan Mistake

Joshua Bender
2 min readJan 26, 2019

--

Some people need a vegan diet. It is a diet for particular people. Philosophically, it’s hard to digest.

If eggs and cheese are cruelly produced, you try to stop the cruelty, not all the eggs and cheese.
Let’s say the world becomes enlightened enough to become vegetarian. All cruelty would be more exposed and ameliorated, and not just eggs and cheese.

The vegan wholesale rejection of a major source of nutrition saddles the difficult dream of a vegetarian world with philosophically questionable interference. It’s just about impossible for the world to become vegetarian as it is. How many people are attracted to the idea of being a vegan compared to being vegetarian? How many just forget the whole thing? Whatever feasibility exists for a more vegetarian world is evaporating with the hardly feasible idea of veganism.

Veganism promotes the eating of meat by confusing the moral issue. It splits the non-meat eating crowd and handicaps the general idea.

Let’s be together on reducing, or heaven forbid removing at least mammals from our diet. The greatness of that goal is matched only by it’s difficulty. If we ever get to the point where we can stop eating birds, we will be on a level of consciousness that will ameliorate cruelty in the making of dairy foods. Veganism could be a redundant block of its own possibility.

I doubt that veganism is a meat producer’s plot. But we should think of it that way.

Thank you for your time.

--

--

Joshua Bender
Joshua Bender

Written by Joshua Bender

Recognizing hatred as the bane of humanity, Non-Borderline Personality Disorder, and coincidentally the literally first sin.

Responses (1)