Investors Seek A Stable Buyer Base

Vegans on Facebook act too unstable, too needy, too broken. Investors seek stability, not only in the product, the delivery, the quality, but in the buyer base, which for now is predominately vegan, which to them means predominately unpredictable. One must wonder if these vegans were unstable prior to stopping their consumption of animals or if it’s a side effect of eating no animals. 

At some point you have to say keep your private life private and stop beating up other vegans because you have a miserable life – miserable from what? Not eating animals or some other reason that damaged people flock to a vegan life style? The problem is that the life style is not curing them of their mental illness, and it appears to others as if it’s making it worse. 

People don’t want to be told how to live their lives in addition to being vegan and vegans do that a lot – right down to the tiniest detail on who and how to love, like, hate anything that moves. All connected to veganism. It’s becoming a burden to investors having to worry about the mental health of their buyer base. Vegans give examples of people who lived centuries ago; they can’t get out of that past that they’re telling everybody else to move away from. 

It’s a contradiction, especially when in those quotes women are marginalized. They don’t care and that’s the problem, they need to care about it all. You can’t tell them what to do or how to do it, yet they tell the rest of the world and expect them to change based on their words, words that actually belong to someone else. The real vegans need to come out of the closet, not with a vengeance toward anyone who criticizes them, not with all this love talk that only happens when you compliment or coddle them. The rest of that world is turning their back, because of the hypocrisy and the lies and the theft of copyrighted material and assigning quotes to dead people who never said them. Show the proof of what you eat.

The deception is glaring.

I like to think that those unstable people on Facebook presenting themselves as vegans are actually trolls for the slaughter industry. Investors can’t prove one way of the other and that’s the bias they see that makes them shy away from investing in only the garden. They simply don’t know. If you have ten or more Facebook accounts with different variations of your name, then you’re a troll, problem is nobody knows for sure for whom.

That’s one reason why companies are seeking the barn and the garden rather than only the garden. There’s a larger buyer base of animal eaters who also eat vegetation, so that’s their INVEST TARGET for now. They’re not going to wait for the vegans to debate over where the grain came from or if it’s GMO in order to be approved as vegan or if it’s gluten-free, or if it contains corn or high fructose corn syrup. Too many cooks spoil the broth, well too many requirements unrelated to and beyond animal-free ingredients spoil the merchandizing potential, especially when outsourced to foreign countries where strict requirements may be the policy but not the practice.

Too many people claiming to be vegan couldn’t give you a list of all the vegan meals they’ve had in the past week, yet they all claim to be vegan for years. Where’s the proof? What do they eat? Where’s their menu plan? When you ask, they get insulted and claim vegan is not a diet. Well, if it isn’t a diet, then that’s the problem right there, because investors are looking to invest in food, not dreams of letting lions and tigers roam free in New York City parks.

Most of the vegans on Facebook are from Britain who climb all over anyone not like them, but couldn’t show you their last meal. They’ve all got phones and cameras on them. Take pictures for one month of every meal and how it conforms to their definition of vegan. They won’t do it, because it has to be their idea. That’s why you’ll never see a quote that comes from them; it’s always some famous person from the past telling people how to live, who can’t confirm or deny. Where’s their proof of how they live and what they consume? It isn’t there and investors know it. They’re not stupid.

Why does the entire world know what gluten-free means and not what vegan means? “Do you have vegan items on the menu?” “Oh sure, lots of gluten-free.” The word is too ambiguous, mulitbiguous. The vegan list goes on and on and on, which means it includes a lot that has nothing to do with the animal. That will be the downfall of the brand. 

Vegan does not equal health food. It’s food absent the animal. Period. All the other ways people use animals other than food product cannot really be called vegan, since everybody consumes medicines that contain animal product and that were tested on animals. You can fight for the elimination of all animal suffering and call that vegan, but beating up people for what you also consume, products of terror and suffering, is the glaring hypocrisy that others see and exploit.

Vegans spend most of their time on social media recruiting/converting other vegans. Imagine how that looks to investors. Their elitism is destroying the brand. They only want to be around other vegans. Most people lie somewhere in the middle – those with whom vegans rarely engage. That needs to be your base target – the majority of animal-eaters. Bumper stickers don’t recruit or convert; leading by example and showing that you’re happy with the choices you made leads. Telling people going vegan isn’t a choice is a lie and everybody sees through it. 

The rich are not going vegan; they’re going gluten-free. All that fuss the vegans made out of not wanting grain in their vegan product won on that only; they took the offending grains out and left the animal in. And they did it quickly. Shutting down all the slaughterhouses isn’t as easy. They took the easy way out. Show me a person claiming to be vegan who isn’t also gluten-free.

Elitists are scared people. Unscare yourself. Then set a better example, a real example and start with your food. You don’t because you’d rather focus on circuses and spiders, rather than what’s on your plate. Afraid of proving what you eat? That’s the rub and that’s why investors are worried about the buyer base. It appears that their buyer base isn’t the vegans. Then who is it? 

You say you can’t eat a plant product that tastes like an animal. Yes you can, because you’ve done it your entire life. There’s another lie. So you’re not going to eat animal-free meats and dairy, instead you figure you’ll assign those products to the vegans in transition. In transition to what? From vegan to vegan? That’s the error, you designating others to eat what you won’t. Yet you had an animal burger the other night, because there wasn’t a plant burger on the menu. That was your excuse. You lost right there with the lie. You said you couldn’t eat a plant burger.

Part of setting the example includes being humble, what humble means to most people not British is truth telling. Brits think that means getting down and dirty and confessing your perversions. No. It doesn’t. Not here. Nowhere. Be honest about what you eat absent excuses. Then do better.








Published by Sharon Lee Davies-Tight, Philosopher, Diplomat, Animal-Free Chef, Spirit Artist, Activist

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