I was slightly puzzled about the outcry from 'vegetarians' about the new £5 note. Vegans, yes, but why vegetarians? If they shun milk, butter, cheese and eggs (and leather goods), aren't they vegans?
What is a vegetarian?
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by french frank View PostI was slightly puzzled about the outcry from 'vegetarians' about the new £5 note. Vegans, yes, but why vegetarians? If they shun milk, butter, cheese and eggs (and leather goods), aren't they vegans?
Attempting to help a neighbour's daughter with vegetarian recipes that could safely be eaten by a vegan (which she professed to be), and discussing the matter with her, made it clear the extent to which it can be a lifestyle, as opposed to dietary preference, issue.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThis outcry reminded me rather of the Indian Mutiny, and cartridges.... Was that just careless reporting? (like birders being called twitchers )
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostAttempting to help a neighbour's daughter with vegetarian recipes that could safely be eaten by a vegan (which she professed to be), and discussing the matter with her, made it clear the extent to which it can be a lifestyle, as opposed to dietary preference, issue.
But you're probably right - they meant vegan.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostThis outcry reminded me rather of the Indian Mutiny, and cartridges....
I too thought of the Indian mutiny and the pork fat on the cartridges, but I heard of no objections from Muslims.
I was reminded of some of the more orthodox of the Jewish girls I taught who used to refuse to lick the labels they were supposed to stick in their school textbooks for fear the glue might not be kosher.
But nobody has to lick (or to bite) banknotes, do they?
.Last edited by jean; 03-12-16, 15:32.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThis morning there was a 'vegetarian cafe' that had, with regret, banned the fivers. Maybe they did mean vegan.
However I often have to remind them than the consumption of milk by humans does involve the death of the baby animals who would otherwise have drunk it.
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Originally posted by jean View PostHowever I often have to remind them than the consumption of milk by humans does involve the death of the baby animals who would otherwise have drunk it.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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#5 jean, I think that might be true of ancestral cows, because they produced much less milk than modern dairy cattle, and if some of it was removed for human consumption, there might well not have been enough left to feed baby cows. But I think modern cows produce so much milk that we can have as much as we want. In fact, my understanding is that cows must be milked every day to drain the udder, so to speak. They could never produce enough babies to drink it all.
Re. the fivers, this sounds completely bonkers to me. For a start, how many other daily objects that we handle are produced by processes that involve the use of animal products? More to the point, vegetarians are not being asked to EAT the fivers, only handle them. Will they also refuse to handle a tin of oxtail soup?
Concerning milk butter and eggs, the strictest will not touch them, because they object to the use of animals to provide human food. I once had a student who took this extreme view, and I always thought she looked most unhealthy, though she seemed to cope OK. My sister is part vegetarian, she refuses red meat and chicken, but will eat fish. The logic of this escapes me, but for the sake of family harmony I have not pursued it. It may be simply an issue of marital harmony, her husband is a keen fisherman.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostRe. the fivers, this sounds completely bonkers to me. For a start, how many other daily objects that we handle are produced by processes that involve the use of animal products? More to the point, vegetarians are not being asked to EAT the fivers, only handle them. Will they also refuse to handle a tin of oxtail soup?
Why is tallow an essential component of the new notes? (If it isn't, then the true "bonkers-ness" is in using it in the first place.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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My understanding - which may be wrong - is that the notes dont actually contain animal products, but that they become contaminated on the surface during the production process. No doubt there are alternative non-animal products that might be used, but I doubt if de la Rue, or whoever prints bank notes, will be persuaded to change to them to satisfy a few veggies.
Good point: is it just fivers? And if its all bank notes, then vegans are going to have to shop where they accept cards, or cheques. Or save loads of coins. But ... they are also likely to have surface contamination of traces of animal products, having been handled by people like me, who are just thinking of a nice fry-up of lamb chops for dinner.
A thought - do vegans reject honey? It is an animal product, but if we didnt eat it, we wouldnt keep bees, so if we all became vegan and refused honey, we'd be responsible for the non-existence of millions of bees.
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Originally posted by umslopogaas View PostA thought - do vegans reject honey?
...if we didnt eat it, we wouldnt keep bees, so if we all became vegan and refused honey, we'd be responsible for the non-existence of millions of bees.
Though with the current dangers to bees, it might not be wise to rely on them.
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Originally posted by jean View PostBut nobody has to lick (or to bite) banknotes, do they?
.My life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by umslopogaas View Post#5 jean, I think that might be true of ancestral cows, because they produced much less milk than modern dairy cattle, and if some of it was removed for human consumption, there might well not have been enough left to feed baby cows. But I think modern cows produce so much milk that we can have as much as we want. In fact, my understanding is that cows must be milked every day to drain the udder, so to speak. They could never produce enough babies to drink it all.
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#11 jean, that is very strange ... the leather she is apparently happy to wear involved the death of a cow - it would have died anyway to provide us with steaks, but none the less, you cant get leather without killing cows. Whereas the honey she wont eat is produced by bees which are farmed for the purpose. True there are still wild bees, but they can only produce a small fraction of the honey we require.
And #12. pianorak, you dont even have to kill one cow specially to provide the necessary tallow, you could get all the tallow you want as a by-product from the local slaughterhouse.
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