I think that if a person wants to remain vegetarian, they're just going to have to go hungry.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
My take is that the optimal approach to food, for health and ethical reasons, may be vegetarianism.
It occurred to me that I just didn't see how I could go ahead and continue to eat meat. It just seemed so... cannibalistic to me. And so, I'm a vegetarian, and I have been ever since.
Being a vegetarian really saves lives.
There used to be a time - it isn't so much the case now - that vegetarianism was some kind of religion, and either you belong or you don't belong.
Many people are turned off at eating vegetarian because of the misconception that all dishes are just an arrangement of bland vegetables.
A vegetarian is a person who won't eat anything that can have children.
One has got to choose between the two evils, also between the lesser of the two evils in the matter of food, and therefore vegetarian food has got to he taken by man in order to sustain human life.
I think vegetarianism is a crucial ethical choice for an individual and a society.
My own view is that being a vegetarian or vegan is not an end in itself, but a means towards reducing both human and animal suffering and leaving a habitable planet to future generations.
Eating vegetarian doesn't mean you have to eat boring, humdrum dishes.