This argument from the same places that defines all non vegans as anti leftist (including people like Castro or Mao) falls rather flat to me then to say that main sub isn't. If you're already way more exclusive with the word than others, who is to say that you aren't for /r/vegan? I've legit seen complaints that /r/vegan is too capitalist because they wanted to eat a vegan burger.
I can't do the marxism/vegan view justice myself in one post, but from the theory sub if anyone actually cared to read it:
Marxists, in turn, do not hold animal liberation activists
in particularly high regard either: they are often seen as
strange ascetics and bourgeois moralists who invest
themselves in negligible causes instead of focusing on
the key issues. They are expected to take part in actions
and alliances for class struggle, but to leave their ‗animal
craze‘ at the door. Many comrades break out in cold
sweat when they ponder a society in which both humans
and animals alike are liberated from exploitation and
oppression, since it would mean giving up their meat and
cheese. And anyway: Friedrich Engels already made fun
of the ―Herren Vegetarianer‖ who underestimated the
importance of meat consumption in the history of human
civilization and who were, at best, utopian socialists.
Nevertheless, we reject this opposition and believe that
the historical materialist analysis and critique of society
developed by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels, the corre-
sponding politics and the call to liberate animals from
their socially produced suffering all necessarily belong
together. On the one hand, demands for animal liberation
are indeed moralist if they do not analyse the historically
specific conditions in which the exploitation of animals
is taking place and which social changes are necessary to
end it. On the other hand, however, every Marxist
critique of society remains incomplete if it does not
consider the fact that, to make profits, the ruling classes
have not only exploited the oppressed classes within the
history of class struggle, but also and always animals
(and nature).
This argument from the same places that defines all non vegans as anti leftist (including people like Castro or Mao) falls rather flat to me then to say that main sub isn't. If you're already way more exclusive with the word than others, who is to say that you aren't for /r/vegan? I've legit seen complaints that /r/vegan is too capitalist because they wanted to eat a vegan burger.
I can't do the marxism/vegan view justice myself in one post, but from the theory sub if anyone actually cared to read it: