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But I'm not going to knock the vegan lifestyle, once they aren't weird and pretentious
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Lol. You don't know more about nutrition or food than I do. Suck my dikk you yellow skin having weak minded sheep. Eat a dikk with a side of tofu. I'm not going to argue with you. I make menus you read books by idiots. Humans evolved to eat, while eating animal fats you dip shyt. If our diets were a detriment to the species we wouldn't have developed as omnivores you cock sucker. You think quoting some book negates my education and profession. It doesn't, good try though numb nuts.
@Still Ill FC vs T. Colin Campbell. One has a doctorate from The Coli Community College. The other...![]()
T. Colin Campbell is an American biochemist who specializes in the effect of nutrition on long-term health. He is the Jacob Gould Schurman Professor Emeritus of Nutritional Biochemistry at Cornell University.
He also put in work at MIT.
Keep making an ass out of yourself bruh bruh.
I used to be a vegan, but got off the diet and just went to being more balanced. This was based on the advice from my mother who's a registered nutritionist/dietician and my doctors. It's a very hard, serious, diet you need to follow. It's also a lifestyle. You can't be calling yourself vegan while wearing leather. It's very extreme, pretty much a religion.
How'd you feel on a vegan diet? Do you feel better now that you're eating meat again? What were the pros to going vegan?![]()
most people don't even like meat without seasoning so you're lying saying you like meat. no, like most black people, we tend to like flavorful dishes.
you essentially eat meat to obtain the nutrients the animal obtained through their diet... why not cut out the middle man and eat more greens/fruits? it's accurate that you can obtain all your nutrients from means other than meat/dairy. those are only two types of foods and people call you extreme when you want to leave them along like their aren't countless other edible things.
then people argue we have "canine" teeth, but a gorilla does as well and doesn't touch meat AT ALL. let that sink in, the strongest land mammals on earth don't even eat meat themselves.
this is all coming from someone who isn't completely vegan, but i can go weeks without meat, days without food. needing less = having more.
I'm gonna try it for a week starting this Sunday. I'll keep you updated!@Coco so you doing this? If so keep me updated pls.
My homie is a vegan and he keeps telling me to go vegan for health reasons, skin care, woo woo. But here's the thing, I lift, he doesn't. Buddy is skinny af, I'm a brolic young bull trying to keep my physique. Will going vegan make me lose my size? This nikka said my main protein source would be beans!![]()
I went vegan for 16 days, felt absolutely great tbh. Got off track but I'm planning on making it a lifestyle starting next week. Getting my protein/calories in were no problem.I've been practically vegetarian for about five years now (I'll eat meat if I'm served it cause I'm not an ass, but I never buy it or cook it). I do it primarily for social justice and environmental reasons, but health as well. I do eat eggs and milk on occasion, but not a ton. Protein sources include lentils, beans, nuts, eggs, milk, ice cream. I make sure to eat a significant amount of protein in every meal. I'm not a bodybuilder, but I do feel like I'm much healthier in this diet and I haven't noticed any lacks in my strength or fitness.
This guy is stacked, world record-holding powerlifter, and is full vegan:
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'Vegan Badass' muscle man pumps iron, smashes stereotypes
(CNN)If you ever assumed vegans all come in one size -- skinny -- think again.
Meet Patrik Baboumian, a German bodybuilder who is smashing soy-based stereotypes.
"I'm probably the most unthinkable vegan on the planet for several reasons," says Baboumian, who's built like Popeye and has broken several powerlifting world records.
His passion for bodybuilding stems from a childhood spent in Iran during the 1980s with the backdrop of war with neighboring Iraq.
"I always had that desire of being strong and being able to protect myself, being able to protect others," he recalls.
Plant power
His family moved to Germany when he was seven years old and it was here that he would begin his journey to weightlifting success.
By the time the gentle giant became "Germany's Strongest Man" in 2011 he was already a vegetarian. But he really started going from strength to strength when he chose the vegan lifestyle, which meant refusing to eat any food that came from animals.
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"I got heavier, I got stronger, I won the European championship title in powerlifting, I broke three world records so everything was going perfect ... my blood pressure went down, and my recovery time was so much faster so I could train more."
The lean green lifting machine decided to use his success to raise awareness about veganism, and how it could help save the planet's environment.
"We have areas in the world where there is not enough food for people and I think it's obscene to use all these resources we have to produce something your body doesn't actually need," says Baboumian.
'Huge impact'
According to the United Nations' World Food Program there are almost 800 million people going hungry in the world today, yet livestock alone are given enough grain to feed 3.5 billionpeople.
View image on Twitter
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It's not just grains that are going to animals, they also place a huge burden on water resources. 15,500 liters of water is needed to produce just one kilo of beef, whereas one kilo of potatoes uses 250 liters.
Deforestation is another issue -- the World Bank estimating that animal agriculture is responsible for up to 91% of the Amazon's destruction.
"I'm not saying everyone should go vegan in just a few days but I'm saying we should reduce the amount of animal products that we use dramatically ... If everyone would do that they would already have a huge impact."
'Just try it!'
Whilst environmental arguments seem like a good reason to go vegan, there are many who find it hard to commit to not eating meat or dairy -- a dilemma Baboumian also wrestled with.
He was previously a dairy addict, drinking 10 liters of milk a day -- but when he became vegan he happily switched to soy milk, a nutritious alternative which he says is kinder to the environment.
"Just try it for four weeks ... nine out of 10 people just stick to it automatically because they feel so much better. It's such a small thing and it has a huge impact on the planet," says Baboumian.
"Most people think if you are vegan you eat just green stuff, you just eat salad and lettuce and veggies the whole day ... I'm eating beans, legumes, lentils and peas and rice and potatoes and a lot of things that have calories to give me the energy to do what I do."
Whether you want to help the environment, feel healthier, or become a record breaking bodybuilder, veganism could be the diet for you.