Aggressive DRM mostly punishes paying customers. The game will probably be cracked anyways.
theonyltruemupf
And this is one of the less problematic memes of this template, there are way worse ones :(
In Europe, SMS has been dead for at least a decade. It was so strange for me to find out other parts of the world still use it to text each other
There are tons of products that neither qualify as Bratling nor are made from seitan. Seitan is specifically wheat protein. Many things are based on soy, peas, beans etc.
Also, why would I use an umbrella term like "seitan product" when I could just call the vegan sausage a vegan sausage?
I'm just going to drop this here.
Transportation is such a small factor in food production is pretty much negligible. Meat always loses vs plants regarding climate impact.
Fine, but because we cannot agree to call things with its proper name ?
Yes, that's all I'm saying. Bacon is Bacon, vegan bacon is vegan bacon.
True, so I suppose that I can come up with some kind of "beyond cabbage" made from animal products and call it cabbage, right ? After all people just need to do is read the label...
If your meat cabbage abomination is labeled correctly and not sold in the vegetable section of the supermarket, sure, go for it. I doubt it would be a successful product, but go for it.
Marburg, 15:00 Uhr, Erwin-Piscator-Haus 🫡
I don't understand why you seem to be so angry about it. I won't buy "real" bacon because it's terrible for both climate and pigs.
Nobody is mislabeling food. Vegan bacon is the perfect term for a vegan bacon substitute and nobody ever bought something labeled "vegan bacon" and was then disappointed that it didn't contain meat. It's not like manufacturers try to deceive people. The stuff is clearly labeled as vegan and it's usually even sold from a different shelf.
I don't think you argue in good faith. Also, Bratling is not a good word for many vegan meat substitutes.
Words do have meaning, but that meaning is not set in stone. I'd argue that plant based sausages, schnitzel, burgers, steaks, bacon etc. are still just that. It's more about the form factor than what exactly it's made of.
It should of course clearly be stated on the package what's inside.
I don't see how "Vegan Bacon" might be a problem.
I would like to buy something called bacon because I like bacon? You can like meat and still be vegan. Most vegans are vegan because of animal cruelty and climate impact, not because they hate meat. I can only speak for my country, but here such products are all on the same shelf and are clearly labeled as vegetarian/vegan. It makes sense to call it vegan bacon or vegan steak because it clearly imitates the meat product and I don't want to have to decipher what it's supposed to be first.
Ich versuche noch rauszufinden, was einen DJ gut macht. Oder schlecht. Oder von einem Handy oder Laptop unterscheidet.
Is there a /r/nothingeverhappens yet?