So veganism isn’t about not causing harm to animals? Just blindly refusing to use animal parts?
Comment on Why isn't it considered vegan to harvest animals who die naturally?
Nurse_Robot@lemmy.world 13 hours ago
For the second question, one could argue driving a car isn’t vegan (unless it’s electric) because gas and oil are technically animal products, even if that animal was a dinosaur
baggins@lemmy.ca 13 hours ago
neatchee@piefed.social 13 hours ago
It’s mostly about consent. We can debate when and where sentience begins, but it begins somewhere and vegans hold a moral philosophy that says using another sentient being’s work product or body without their consent is immoral.
Note that I am not vegan myself but understand, if not agree with, their moral position.
And as another reply said, most vegans recognize it as a “best effort” philosophy, as they appreciate the impracticality of an absolutist stance. They are focused on “harm reduction”.
Arghblarg@lemmy.ca 13 hours ago
I’m gonna be that “acktually…” guy for a sec here. Oil & gas (mostly) are not dinosaurs… the vast majority of petrochemicals are from compressed dead algae, planktom and plant matter long pre-dating the dinosaurs: chevron.com/…/explainer-where-do-oil-and-gas-come…
Wildmimic@anarchist.nexus 11 hours ago
Where does this notion that oil&gas are dead dinosaurs come from? I know what you said is the truth, just as coal is the remainder of the huge forests that existed before bacteria could break down cellulose, but i would really like to know where this wrong factoid comes from - it’s literally everywhere
snooggums@piefed.world 9 hours ago
Here's a nice write up from a paleontologist.