zwanzig_zwoelf
Graverobber Foundation
Copper Dreams 2 should offer handbooks made from human foreskins.From the comments:The handbook is pretty but could we maybe get one without animal parts involved?
Really?! You want a vegan game?!!
Copper Dreams 2 should offer handbooks made from human foreskins.From the comments:The handbook is pretty but could we maybe get one without animal parts involved?
Really?! You want a vegan game?!!
Considering how awesome those manuals they made for SitS looked, that wouldn't be the worst thing that ever happened.Seems Whalenought should switch to producing cool items instead of games :D
Copper Dreams 2 should offer handbooks made from human foreskins.From the comments:The handbook is pretty but could we maybe get one without animal parts involved?
Really?! You want a vegan game?!!
Copper Dreams 2 should offer handbooks made from human foreskins.From the comments:The handbook is pretty but could we maybe get one without animal parts involved?
Really?! You want a vegan game?!!
on the other hand, why is kickstarter seems to slow down on weekend?
Copper Dreams 2 should offer handbooks made from human foreskins.
From the comments:The handbook is pretty but could we maybe get one without animal parts involved?
Really?! You want a vegan game?!!
vegans are the most beta people on earth. their ancestors eat meat for ten thousands of years, and they suddenly "oooh animals are friends! not food!" yeah. tell that to much 500 grams sirloin steak, bitch.
nah, we just found more effective way to slaugther and keep the animals.vegans are the most beta people on earth. their ancestors eat meat for ten thousands of years, and they suddenly "oooh animals are friends! not food!" yeah. tell that to much 500 grams sirloin steak, bitch.
Alternatively it's funny how people think that eating packaged meats puts them on the same level as our ancestors who hunt for their own food.
I wonder if they could make a character model of me to go along with my portrait?
From the comments:The handbook is pretty but could we maybe get one without animal parts involved?
Really?! You want a vegan game?!!
From the comments:The handbook is pretty but could we maybe get one without animal parts involved?
Really?! You want a vegan game?!!
This is the only thing that gave me momentary pause when going for the collector's box. Could I live with myself having dead deer on my bookshelf. Then I remembered that oaks had to be cut down to create the book cover and realised that I'm a terrible person, destroying the world with my avarice. Moral dilemma solved, at least for the moment.
Here are 10 things you thought were vegan that may not be—and that you may not be able to avoid.
1. Glue
Could the books you own not be vegan? Veganissimo states that animal glue is traditionally used in paper and wood processing, bookbinding, painting, conservation/restoration and for making musical instruments and furniture. Animal glue can be made of animal proteins such as gelatin, which is created by boiling animal tissues.
2. Photo prints
Photos, both printed commercially and at-home, use paper that contains gelatin. Alternatives? Non-photo quality paper.
3. Vaccines
Your flu shot as well as any other vaccine you get is not entirely free of animal substances, according to Veganissimo. Classically, vaccines were created by infecting pathogens into fertilized chicken eggs, then destroying the eggs and extracting the pathogen serum. Modern methods include using cell cultures obtained from the tissues of animals, such as dog kidneys. These samples can be reproduced without addition sample-taking from animals.
4. LCD screens and displays
Liquid crystals found in screens on TVs, computers and cell phones may be based on cholesterol taken from animals.
5. Batteries
Gelatin is used in metal processing to improve metal's structure, such as cadmium in batteries. Animal fats and gelatin are used in many technical applications to which we owe the comforts of our life… and "at present it is extremely difficult—it not impossible—to find alternatives," write the authors.
6. Vitamin D
Some vitamin D dietary supplements source vitamin D3 from animals. Look for vitamin D3 supplements that are produced from non-animal sources and clearly labeled "vegan."
7. Clear fruit juices, beer and wine
Gelatin, egg white, isinglass (fish glue), casein (milk protein) or activated carbon are the top choices for the "fined" process, which clears beverages of cloudy substances. The only way to know if an animal substance wasn't used is to ask the producer.
8. Bone china tableware
This type of pure white, fine china is made of porcelain that contains bone ash, the residue from burned animal bones. Earthenware or porcelain that's creamy white, or mineral in origin, can be substituted.
9. Sponges (Porifera)
Natural sea sponges are plant-like animals that live on the sea floor, and used in the bath, for home cleaning or watercolor painting. Seems obvious, but I hadn't stopped to think about this one before. Synthetic sponges are alternatives.
10. Pharmaceutical drugs
Lots of drugs contain hidden animal substances in the form of excipients, ingredients that stabilize or bulk the medicine. The most commonly used substance is lactose (milk sugar), which can be found in tablets. Another is gelatin, which is found frequently in capsules. Look for vegan alternatives which include starch or cellulose.
What is the actual moral high ground for veg- types? That the plants don't have nerve endings?
Veganism is not just about animal cruelty, but also about the carbon footprint.
This is the only thing that gave me momentary pause when going for the collector's box. Could I live with myself having dead deer on my bookshelf. Then I remembered that oaks had to be cut down to create the book cover and realised that I'm a terrible person, destroying the world with my avarice. Moral dilemma solved, at least for the moment.
Joe said in reply that it could be possible, so I'm cautiously optimistic.
Indeed.
Veganism is not just about animal cruelty, but also about the carbon footprint. Hardcore vegans only consume plants fertilized with night soil and eshew the use of electricity altogether, which is one of the most environmentally conscious lifestyles possible.
How so?
What is the actual moral high ground for veg- types? That the plants don't have nerve endings?
Because most countries have laws against these sorts of things and only a small number of farms cage their animals like this. I may be mistaken though.