If your a vegan please answer these easy question?!


Question: 1. do you have pets?
if you do, do you feed them beef flavored food?
2. can you eat jell-o and other gelatin products?
gelatin is made from animal tissue (or so i've been told)
3. can you eat bread?
bread is made from yeast, and yeast is a living thing
thanks!


Answers: 1. do you have pets?
if you do, do you feed them beef flavored food?
2. can you eat jell-o and other gelatin products?
gelatin is made from animal tissue (or so i've been told)
3. can you eat bread?
bread is made from yeast, and yeast is a living thing
thanks!

1. My dog eats commercially available dog food made with organically raised, non-battery caged chicken and no rendered byproducts.

2. No, gelatin is not suitable for vegetarians or vegans because it is a slaughter byproduct.

3. Vegans believe that ANIMALS have the capacity for suffering, therefore we avoid all products made from, made by or tested on ANIMALS. Yeast are not members of the Animal Kingdom; they belong to the same kingdom as fungi like mushrooms. We do eat yeast because we don't believe that fungi (or plants, the other kingdom we eat from regularly) have the capacity for suffering.

1. Yes, I feed my dog food that contains animal products. My dog is not a vegan and I got her before I made the choice for myself.

2. I do not eat Jell-O, just to be safe.

3. I do not eat bread. I eat unleavened whole wheat tortillas. I can get them at the supermarket and they are delicious.

On a side note, I don't eat honey either.

1. Yes, I have a dog. She's a vegetarian, doesn't eat beef flavored products. Dogs are omnivores (like humans) so they can be perfectly on well-balanced veg diets.

2. Gelatin is technically not vegetarian, and I try to avoid it when I can. There are some Jello puddings that come in a box and they are vegan if you use soymilk.

3. Yes, I eat bread. Yeast and plants are both living things, but they don't have brains or nerve endings... they're not capable of suffering like animals are.

I'm not quite a vegan, but close enough...

1. My dog eats chicken, lamb, beef, etc. He also eats some of my food occasionally, so he's definitely an omnivore, not a carnivore.
2. No. Gelatin is made from animal skins, hoofs, etc. so it's totally off the menu.
3. Yeast is a fungus. It's definitely not an animal. It's not quite a plant either, but it's closer to being a plant than an animal. Fungi used to be thought of as part of the Plant Kingdom, but now they have their own separate kingdom, as do algae.

yes,lots of pets.say no to gelatin-yuck!yes,bread is cool if it contains no eggs/no dairy.

1. yes i have a cat.
no i dont feed him beef flavoured food.

2. no i dont touch gelatin(neither would a vegetarian) or any other animal products, if i did i wouldnt be a vegan!

3. i can eat certain makes of bread, i avoid the ones with milk in and any other animal product!

DOGS AND CATS ARE CARNIVORES, NOT OMNIVORES! They are adaptable, and just because they can survive on an omnivourous or vegetarian diet, does not mean that it is healthy, especially when all of the evidence supports otherwise.
Its funny how vegans say that our teeth our not omnivirous but in fact vegetarian, and go on long winded diatribes about how our teeth are not made for eating meat...look in a dog or cat's mouth! NO teeth in there for grinding plant matter!

I dont give two craps about any diet choice one makes for themselves, but forcing you pet to subsist off of a diet that does not come close to supporting their natural needs amounts to animal ABUSE!

The most common culprit of allergies in dogs and cats is CORN, WHEAT, and especially SOY PROTIEN.

Its unfortunate that people feel the need to force their life choices onto a helpless animal. Thats like someone giving you nothing to eat but steak, youwould eventually have to eat it!

Man, that just enrages me!

1) Yes, two birds. No, they eat seeds with added calcium and vitamin mix. If we had a cat or dog, then that would be a different story.

2) No, gelatin is made from animal parts. I use agar-agar powder instead. It works like jello, for the most part. And it's used in asia normally, even now. It's not some weird chemical - it's a type of seaweed.

3) Yes, bread is yummy. As long as no silly person added milk or egg to the bread, it's fine. Milk and egg are not necessary ingredients in bread, after all, but are added to make it richer. I like to homemake bread - kneading by hand is awesome with the doors open and a nice breeze... Mmmmm, yeast. Yeah, It's considered a Fungi, not an animal. More like a mushroom.

Enjoy!

1) I live with one cat. She mostly enjoys fish-flavored foods, but she does get a variety of canned foods I buy from natural pet supply stores. She's a CAT. She needs meat. I am a human. I do not.

2) No, gelatin is not vegetarian, much less vegan.

3) Yes. Yeast is a fungus, not an animal. I mean, that's edging close to the "what about the plants? aren't they living things" argument.

1. yes (family pet), eats meat
2. no, but I make my own jelly using agar (or buy jellies from asian supermarkets... oishii!)
3. there is a mixed view on the yeast from vegan perspective... all vegans I know eat it. I do too - home-made bread is the nicest.
I just don't like eating something that was once conscious





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