this post was submitted on 06 May 2026
182 points (94.6% liked)
Memes of Production
1597 readers
361 users here now
Seize the Memes of Production
An international (English speaking) socialist Lemmy community free of the “ML” influence of instances like lemmy.ml and lemmygrad. This is a place for undogmatic shitposting and memes from a progressive, anti-capitalist and truly anti-imperialist perspective, regardless of specific ideology.
Rules:
Be a decent person.
No racism, sexism, ableism, homophobia, transphobia, zionism/nazism, and so on.
Other Great Communities:
founded 4 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
A sensible approach
A subjective opinion i happen to agree with.
I think this is on a sliding scale depending on the level of insecurity, but i think we generally agree on this also.
Which was exactly my point.
To someone struggling with feeding themselves and/or their family "If your personal choice has victims, claiming it’s a personal choice ceases to be a valid reasoning to do it." sounds a lot like someone talking down to you.
Agreed, See response directly above.
That is not at all clear from the reply that i originally responded to. i think we might also disagree on what "small minority" means ( i wouldn’t consider 20% a small minority, but that’s subjective i suppose).
Another implication not clear from their original reply.
I agree, but :
Doesn't convey that nuance ( for me at least )
Not what i said, or what either of you said, though i will admit to probably taking the "walmart" part of that statement too literally.
Even so , access to a grocer isn't the same as access to enough food which is explained in my previous replies.
I'm not sure where that number comes from but assuming it's true it's still a far cry from the 99% you claimed (though now I’m thinking that was possibly hyperbolic on purpose and i missed it)
Agreed.
Agreed.
I'd also be interested to see the results of that but generally agree.
Disagree on this one for several reasons.
I'm not sure enough about this to claim on the whole for either direction, best i can say (anecdotally) is that the meat industrial complex has the capability to undercut the agricultural industry in some cases (on a calorie to calorie basis and including nutritional balance).
The link is interesting though, there's more to the fiscal accessibility of non-meat food than i realised, it doesn't cover opportunity cost, but as a general study of fiscal access it has a lot of information that's new to me, i'll have a proper read.
There's a few caveats/assumptions to that statement.
Access (in a fiscal and physical sense) to 2nd hand pressure cookers is not something i'd assume is widely possible with the kind of demographics that have been mentioned.
Not to say there would be no access, just that i'm not sure it's as much of a game changer as you make it sound.
I'm genuinely not sure what 30 second pressure cooker meals you are talking about but it sounds like magic, i don't mean this in an insulting way, if you could send me some examples i'd appreciate it, that would be very helpful to me personally.
Pressure cookers are arguably more dangerous than most other kitchen appliances, in that they are essentially bombs with a lot of safeguards, i'd be wary of purchasing a 2nd hand one of dubious origin, but i know that's partly a privilege thing on my part so it's possibly not as relevant as the other points.
The 83% was because 30m food insecure/ 330m Americans ~=83%. 17% is maybe not a "small" minority, but I think it's heavily implied that's not who they're talking about. The person they responded to said "food is deeply personal" and "if we moralize food, we will lose people." Veganism isn't going to "lose people " who have the options of "eat meat or starve" because those people have essentially no choice anyway. Personal implies it's part of their personality/culture/important to them in a way that isn't just about survival. Neither person mentioned extreme circumstances, and it is exceedingly rare for someone to use "personal choice" when referring to something that is at or close to life or death. I would never say "I cut off my leg as a personal choice since there was a risk I could die from infection." That is however the exact language I would use for things I really don't want to give up, like "eating dinner with my friends is deeply personal." I wouldn't say "not starving is deeply personal," it just doesn't really make sense.
I do think for 95% of people on lemmy it is a personal choice whether they are vegan or not, 99% was maybe an exaggeration but I wouldn't doubt that either. I'm specifically talking about the generally tech literate, educated people that figured out how to get and use lemmy with that 99%, not the average American or the average person.
Their implication was that "you live in a first world country and realistically are not impoverished (inferred from you using lemmy), as are most people making this argument, therefore you have a grocery store you can access and can choose to not eat meat." I was using America's poverty numbers because that's where I and most people using lemmy live, but many other countries have better social safety nets so there would be even less of a reason to not be vegan.
The meat industry has massive subsidies, at least in the US, which is why it is so incredibly competitive fiscally with plant based diets. I think also to mention these are staple foods like rice lentils etc, fruits and vegetables still might end up being more expensive, meaning it would still be harder/more effort to do a nutritionally complete vegan diet.
Here's an example for a 30 second instant pot recipe, it's basically how fast can you dump the cans and spices into the cooker (and coarsely chop a tomato). Just replace the chicken broth with anything else, like vegetable broth. If someone's worried about second hand some of the cheaper ones are $60, or just put it in another room and let the pressure naturally escape overnight, which is what my brothers all do when they use one. The pressure is high but it's not going to do anything crazy to your house.