Welcome ti the forums!
AtheistVegan wrote:Hello fellow Vegan Atheist! Veganism is not a religion, diet, trend or fad. It is a philosophy, a way of life, a moral code. Real true vegans do for ethics not health.
Disclaimer: this might be a bit of a rant, excuse me.
I think this attitude is very unhelpful. A very powerful thing about veganism is that there are so many valid reasons to go vegan, of which at least one appeals to most people. If you're only promoting one aspect, you miss out one a lot of persuasive ability. Don't care about ethics? How about the environment? World hunger? Avoiding heart disease, diabetes, cancer and alzheimer's? Anyone cares about at least one of those things.
Since I saw my grandfather wither away due to alzheimer's, that very last reason is what drew me into veganism; i wanted nobody to suffer that fate. Thus, I consuming milk, dairy and eggs and was thereby 95% vegan. Was I at that point a real vegan? Perhaps not, but I was helping the animals just as much as any non-activist vegan. Had there not been people like Neal Barnard and Michael Greger out there, promoting the health benefits of veganism, I might have never become vegan.
Sure, a non-ethical vegan might be more likely to 'cheat', but that 1 hotdog month is a huge improvement from wherever one started. And if you're already avoiding the addictive animal foods, it is so much easier to open up to the ethics and eliminate that last 4% animal products.
So what do we tell the guy that had cancer twice and decides to try and avoid it with a vegan diet? Do we tell him he's not a real vegan until he does it for ethics, or do we tell him it's great that he's doing this, tell him about the B12 and such, and then carefully introduce him to the ethics?