Guest guest Posted September 11, 2005 Report Share Posted September 11, 2005 Ditto Pat: " Fish oil would still make you a vegetarian, it just wouldn't make you a vegan. " is NOT a true statement. By some big stretch, people who consume fish and fish products might be labeled pesca vegetarians, but they are not true vegetarians. The generally accepted definitions are: A 100% vegetarian does not consume anything from an animal source, not eggs, not dairy, not honey. A vegan is a 100% vegetarian who also does not wear or otherwise use anything from an animal source and therefore would eschew leather, wool, etc. A vegetarian does not eat animal flesh (muscles really), but will consume egg and dairy products. A real vegetarian would not consume gelatin or honey. You CAN get DHA supplements in vegetarian capsules. I use a DHA supplement that I order through Vegan Essentials online. I have done this for over a year on the advise of both Dr. Michael Greger (veganmd.com) and Dr. Tom Barnard in Ontario, Canada. My arthritis symptoms have improved and my skin tone is better, and my mood has even elevated since starting on this supplement. from Maida Citizens for Pets in Condos, http://www.petsincondos.org South Florida Vegetarian Events, http://www.soflavegevents.net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 11, 2005 Report Share Posted September 11, 2005 On Sep 11, 2005, at 10:39 AM, Maidawg wrote: > > The generally > accepted definitions are: > > A 100% vegetarian does not consume anything from an animal > source, not eggs, not dairy, not honey. > > A vegan is a 100% vegetarian who also does not wear or otherwise > use anything from an animal source and therefore would eschew leather, > wool, etc. > > A vegetarian does not eat animal flesh (muscles really), but > will consume egg and dairy products. A real vegetarian would not > consume gelatin or honey. " Generally accepted " by whom? Not any of the vegetarians I know (or at least not the ones I know in person.) I was always under the impression that a vegetarian didn't eat anything that clearly involved the killing of an animal, which means other than meat they/we don't eat gelatin and (if they're vegetarians for moral reasons) avoid leather. Vegans take the extra step of not eating anything that involves an animal at all, which means they aren't consuming dairy, eggs, or honey. Again, if they're doing it for moral reasons (which I imagine almost all vegans are) they also avoid things like wool and silk. Stolen from http://www.vrg.org/nutshell/faq.htm#types : What are the different types of vegetarians? 1) Lacto-Ovo Vegetarian: does not eat meat, fish or fowl. Eats dairy and egg products. 2) Ovo Vegetarian: does not eat meat, fish, fowl or dairy products. Eats egg products. 3) Lacto Vegetarian: does not eat meat, fish, fowl or eggs. Eats dairy products. 4) Vegan: does not eat any animal products including meat, fish, fowl, eggs, dairy, honey, etc. Most vegans do not use any animal products such as silk, leather, wool, etc. as well. Haras the Wonder Frog Princess of the Sandwiches ] " We used to say if a frog had side pockets, ] he'd carry a handgun. " - Dan Rather Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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