this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2023
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You're 100% right but these should be called vegan if thats the case
That's a synonym for plant-based.
Vegan is a loaded term for a lot of people. They recoil in horror at the thought of something being "vegan". But "plant-based" isn't anywhere near as vile, for those people.
Like seriously it's quite vile how they treat the vegans before processing them into mashed potatoes that's why I prefer plant based products over vegan products
Actually no "Plant-based" is a meaningless phrase that doesn't actually denote whether a food product contains animal products or not
Not sure if I agree it's meaningless. In most cases it does mean what it implies, even if it doesn't have regulatory backing.
In the UK we've got all sorts of labels like 5 a day, the red tractor to imply it's of a certain standard and from a domestic farm or even the vegan label. They're all basically meaningless labels rather than something that's based on the actual product, but they still tend to track with what they're saying they are in most cases.
Don't take everything at face value, but also don't waste your time worrying that everyone is lying to you barefaced
I read the article and that’s not what it says. It’s actually about meat and dairy industries trying to stop plant-based products using terms like “mayo” or “burger”.
Plant-based means plant-based, as far as I can see.
“manufacturers should take care to clearly label their products as plant-based to the extent they are offered as an alternative to an historically animal-derived product.”
Whether or not it's a meaningless phrase, it seems in the article you provided they're still at least correlating the terms "plant-based" and "vegan", if not equating them.
It literally says vegan right on the package….
How can you tell?
That pixel over there