carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 2:57 amFor example bees are exploited to pollinate a variety of nut and fruit crops and if anything bees are harmed more by this than honey production.
They usually go hand in hand, where honey is harvested from mobile bee hives, so it's hard to distinguish the two.
All other things being equal, is it better for bees to have a stationary or mobile colony?
That's not clear. There seem to be advantages and disadvantages to each. Moving the colony means bees don't need to fly as far to gather nectar and pollen (something that will result in casualty). A slow moving colony might be ideal so that bees have a short commute to flowers and do not become lost when the colony moves.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 2:57 amBut these crops are all considered vegan.
So are medications that are developed with animal testing. There are benefits to these crops which are not apparent in honey itself. There's a big difference between an almond and a teaspoon of sugar.
If we're going to use bees to help pollinate crops, it seems like the least we could do to not take the honey.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 2:57 amBut why put bees on a pedestal in the first place?
Bees are presumed to be significantly more intelligent than most other insects. Other insects are likely barely sentient, if at all.
The philosophical significance of hive minds is an interesting topic, but even individually bees seem to demonstrate a level of intelligence and awareness that most other insects lack.
People care about bees rather than fruits flies and aphids for good reason.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 2:57 amWhat reason is there to believe less insects are harmed when producing other sweeteners?
The same reason to believe more animals are harmed in animal agriculture. Bees, like chickens, are not magical creatures that generate calories from thin air.
Chickens are fed plant calories, and so are bees: when the honey is taken it must be replaced. There's only a slim margin of excess produced from the flowers that can be taken without replacement.
FOR that excess, there's an argument to be made that it's a sustainable sweetener, but that's not how commercial apiaries work. I wouldn't consider it a problem for somebody to have bees in his or her backyard and collect only excess honey.
When you buy honey, you're also buying the sugar that's fed to the bees to replace the honey you took. Sugar that has no significant nutritional difference for humans, but that's an inferior substitute for bees. It's a negative sum proposition.
As to whether we should consume sugar at all since it's nutritionally devoid? Probably not. We should probably be using sucralose instead.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 1:25 pm
Any certified vegan product cannot contain honey.
Nor oysters. Certified vegan products are only going to contain things that nearly all vegans are OK with and follow the definition to the letter so nobody is confused. Other things may be ethical to consume, but there are also implications for allergies, etc.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 1:25 pmNor is there "great disagreement"

So says the raving mad anti-vegan troll.
I'm sure you're
such an expert in the vegan community having
so many vegan friends and getting along with us
so well.
Honey, Oysters, and Palm Oil are all common debates among vegans.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 1:25 pmyou just have a few that are willing to go against the party line and they are usually referred to as "beegans".
Beegan is a great term, so is ostrovegan. It's good to have new terms which help people learn the different ways they can be vegan, and that it's not all or nothing. It also helps avoid confusion and people giving oysters or honey to vegans who don't eat those things.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 1:25 pmWhen people start to agree with what I've said....they start to stop considering themselves vegan.
They can consider themselves beegans, which is also good. There are issues with modern honey production, but they pale in comparison to animal agriculture. Anybody who makes a conscientious decision to reduce the amount of animal products in his or her diet is an ally. Doesn't really matter if they call themselves vegan. People don't have to be vegan to be good people.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 1:25 pmVeganism is inherently dogmatic and the vegan community has little tolerance for intellectualism.....
More of your dishonest anti-vegan rhetoric. Couldn't be further from the truth.
carnap wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2019 1:25 pmthese people are demonized and rejected quickly.
By no means. Only the most extreme abolitionists think it's a good idea to demonize and reject allies.
Beegans, ostrovegans, even pescetarians and all manner of reducetarians are respected and welcome here as friends and allies.
Anti-vegans, particularly the intellectually dishonest ones who have no other purpose than to advance an agenda of fear mongering and discourage people from being vegan with pseudoscience, are really the only ones we have a problem with. And yet we still don't ban them... weird, almost like this isn't an echo chamber. Your own presence on this forum is proof against your claims.