The French government issued a decree Tuesday banning the term “steak” on the label of vegetarian products, saying it was reserved for meat alone.

  • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    “It is for certain people” is not a reasoning. How is it for those people? What is the benefit they would gain from that? Is that benefit marginal, or significant? Does it impact other people? How do those things balance out? Should we ignore interests of other people because we judge them morally inferior, even if it’s a seemingly innocuous thing as a word continuing to signify what it has signified since time immemorial? Politically/strategically speaking, is pissing those people off by infringing on their language making it more or less likely that they adopt the set of morals we think they should adopt?

    • @Vegoon@feddit.de
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      19 months ago

      How is it for those people

      In the same way people who don’t want to get drunk drink alcohol free beer if they like the taste. And there is no moral assessment in drinking one or the other. I gave you a possible reason. Just like the person which drinks alcohol free beer might have to drive. It is a reason, you get all emotional and I think you should work on that or else you end up like the antivegan meatflakes. Good luck

      • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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        9 months ago

        In the same way people who don’t want to get drunk drink alcohol free beer if they like the taste.

        Alcohol free beer is made from water, malt, and hops. Meat-free steak is not made from animals.

        Do you acknowledge that that makes a difference? If I want to sell something that’s made from water, sugar, carbon dioxide and raspberries, I’m free to call it a soda, but not beer, because beer is made from specific ingredients, because it always has been, and thus is what people expect when they buy beer.

        You can’t just say “but, well, both are beverages and when other people drink beer I drink soda”: That does not even begin to make soda and beer interchangeable because calling them the same does not make them substantively the same, they’re still different products (or categories thereof). Ask a biologist: Barley, hops, raspberries, all completely different species.

        It is a reason

        You gave an analogy. An analogy is not a reason, or reasoning, but a way of saying “here this thing is similar, and for that thing there’s a reasoning and it also applies here”. Thing is: Neither did you show how the two are sufficiently similar (and I just showed how they’re fundametally different), you also failed to give a reasoning why alcohol-free beer should be allowed to be called beer (the reason, btw, is that beer with negligible levels of alcohol is just as old as beer that makes you drunk).

        You’re not even half as thorough with any of this as you think you are. You may feel strongly about it but on its own that only means that your conviction is strong, not that your reasoning is. Doubling and tripling down on “But I really think this is the case! I feel it very strongly!” isn’t going to convince people: Conviction isn’t contagious. If you want people to follow in your footsteps you’ll have to do better. And if it isn’t for wanting for people to follow in your footsteps, to come over to your position, why are you arguing on the internet?

        antivegan meatflakes

        IDGF about what you eat. I’m arguing about food labelling. Also have you even skimmed that study, I’ve never even heard about r/antivegan but things like this:

        Though r/AntiVegan users might be criticised for engaging in “myside bias”, the evaluation of evidence in a manner biased toward one’s own opinions, they nonetheless present relatively well-reasoned critiques of scientific research. For example, those that call attention to the issues associated with the use of non-comparative control groups, the over-generalising of findings from small samples, and averaging data while neglecting individual differences and outliers.

        or

        Both advice-seeking and advice-giving ex-vegans used r/AntiVegan as a social support forum and as a personal diary of the process involved in returning to their omnivorous diet: “Checking in after two months of ex-veganism … I have gained weight … Oh, I also got my period”.

        don’t exactly paint a damning picture.

        • @Vegoon@feddit.de
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          19 months ago

          I have made none of those points you ask me to defend? I answered one your hopeless stupid questions and now you come up with with points nobody made.

          You are done and not entertaining, just worrying.

          • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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            9 months ago

            I have made none of those points you ask me to defend?

            I’m not asking you to defend anything. I’m waiting for you to give the reasoning you promised me, the reasoning of why it is prudent that “steak” shall cease to refer to meat products, and meat products only. Why we should treat this instance any differently than when saying that if you write “strawberry” on jam there need to be strawberries in it, and at least so and so much percent.

            You are done and not entertaining, just worrying.

            I’m not here to entertain you but to make you back up your claims with sound reasoning. Believe it or not, I do that as a service to veganism: I harbour no ill will, I want you folks to do better. I’m flexi and when I read shit like “I stopped veganism because my period stopped” I pity you. Vegans, of all people, should be on fucking top of nutritional science.

            And that, btw, is not intended to make you defend anything, either. I just wanted to give my motive. Yes, a vegan diet can be 110% healthy. You also need to be thorough with it, and not reflexively deflect critique with “But it’s morally the right thing!”: Because that’s how you end up not being thorough enough, thus incur health damage, thus discourage others from trying it for themselves (they may share your morals, but are apprehensive), and also fuel the flames of idiots who think it’s outrageous that there’s a “vegan” label on their bag of frozen veggies. I’d be fucking worried if that bag wasn’t vegan.

            We didn’t speak about nutrition at all – but it’s the same pattern. In another thread possibly on another site I dealt with a vegan claiming that there’s no such thing as essential amino acids, which is utter bunk: There are. With a half-way balanced diet you don’t need to worry, but they didn’t want to believe in it because they somehow considered it an attack on veganism. They understood “make sure you eat healthy” as “vegans are necessarily malnourished”. They could not give a reasoning of how they came to that association: Same as you can’t give me a reasoning as to how you came to the conclusion that it must be permitted to call saitan steak because otherwise… what? What’s the danger to veganism that is incurred by not being able to use the word “steak” for what you eat? Is the future of the world depending on it?

            And you don’t even have to tell me. Just figure out and know for yourself and believe it or not, the world will become a little bit of a better place because there’s going to be a bit more self-knowledge. And with that I’ve given you the deep motive behind the superficial one. If that approach worries you that’s understandable: Humanity doesn’t know jackshit about itself and that lack is indeed scary. People might even attack you for knowing yourself, out of jealousy. But that shouldn’t stop you from looking, that’d be defeatism.