![none [none]](./images/smilies/none.gif)
I was pointing out that vegan options aren't as affordable and accessible in many parts of the world as it is in the US. He started listing a bunch of cheap vegan ingredients, but I'm forced to eat out at least one meal a day, where the cheapest cooked meals are typically unhealthy and not at all vegan (though they may be vegetarian. I personally don't eat much meat, and I love vegetables and salads; but they usually have eggs or mayo or honey.) The vegan options here are mostly targeted towards rich white tourists and would require some travelling during my lunch hour, plus double or triple my food budget. He said he was homeless for 3 years and still managed to be vegan and that I'm just making excuses, and posted a lot of pictures of sad animals.
I get angry about food a lot because I have limited options for what I can eat in terms of cost and access, and get mad when people who have those options suggest I'm heartless for not caring about the animals. I hate animal cruelty, and if we found a way to eradicate that and make the industry humane I'd be extremely happy. Heck, if the whole world were to turn vegan, I'd also be fine. But until then it's not a realistic option for me, and when I looked up local vegans, one thing they agreed on was that it was an extremely difficult lifestyle to maintain here.
My primary objection right now is also how it would require inconveniencing a lot of people I care about and standing out in a bad way. Meals in Asia are often communal with people sharing common dishes. I've spent a lot of effort trying to fit in, and don't want to be that one weird person eating a special meal alone, or have to excuse myself from future social meal gatherings with family or friends (which one local vegan said was the hardest part). My family also eats dinner together, and often it's my mother and/or brother doing the cooking because they're home first. I don't want to have to either force the whole family to turn vegan or request that they cook a whole different meal for me, or cook my own meal and eat later/separately from everyone else. A family friend once talked about how her friend's daughter was vegan and kept demanding she cook her a separate meal every day because she refused to eat what everyone else was eating, and that made me angry at how inconsiderate it was. I thought she should have at least cooked her own food, and if that wasn't an option because of time constraints, to just be grateful and eat whatever was there. But then that's been countered with how it's selfish and self-centred to consider our social standing and not annoying/inconveniencing other people to be more important than the lives and suffering of animals.
The second objection is how mentally exhausting it will be to have to look up the ingredients or make a best guess of what goes into every dish I order, or ask the stallholders and be that annoying person holding up the queue. It's often not possible to tell on sight if something was cooked with butter, honey, animal fat, broth, eggs, milk, etc. Many foods I would have thought are vegan turn out not to be. I also have extremely strong feelings against food wastage, and can't bear hearing about vegans who throw out perfectly good food because they heard that it contained some animal product. How does that do anything for the animals, who now died for nothing? Tons of meat go to waste each year, and that bothers me much more. It also means that even after I do all that, it will likely have little to zero impact on the number of animals actually killed; it would just mean more wastage, and maybe a cleaner conscience that helps no one.
and that's just the food; when it comes to other products I don't know how anyone has the mental energy to go full vegan, such as those who refuse to buy books because they're bound with gelatin, or watch films likewise because of the gelatin, or use or buy products with glue.
I do recognise that these are all excuses, and that - as he said - if I really cared about the animals, I'd do whatever it takes. My issue is only with his assumption that being vegan is cheap and easy and the only reason people don't do it is because they're selfish and like bacon. Also the cultural ignorance, like that time someone told me I could just grow my own vegetables. I live in an apartment, as does 90% of the population. We do not have gardens.
I honestly don't see how this approach of convincing individual people to avoid anything involving animal products would help those animals in any substantial way, vs going straight to the top and working to implement food industry reforms to either improve animal welfare at farms or make vegan options affordable and accessible for everyone. That's how substantial change happens, not by demanding someone throw away their fresh cup of coffee because it had milk in it, as one vegan did. It would make so much more difference and be a lot more achievable if people managed just to halve or quarter their meat intake, or go vegetarian, vs the current focus on all-or-nothing veganism that's concerned more with individual purity than the actual effect on animals.
but I still feel guilty and don't know what to do.