Updated template. Had no idea on who the knucklehead from the original template was.

    • monsterpiece42
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      4 months ago

      OP does not use said meme

      this guy links to it

      Smh.SMH.

      (Or possibly OP edited away from that meme and this guy leaves the link. I’m a day late, take your pick. )

  • @JohnnyCanuck@lemmy.ca
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    754 months ago

    Whenever anyone brings this up, I imagine a vegan sitting at a table with their new friends, refusing to eat any chicken wings, but also not saying why… And then everyone harassing them with a million questions like, “do you not like hot sauce? We can get barbecue”, “are you on a diet?”, “are you allergic?”, etc, etc. Finally, after half an hour of this, they lose it and just as there’s a lull in the music, they scream out, “look, I’m a vegan! I don’t fucking eat meat! Fuck off!”

    The whole bar goes quiet, staring, then one of the people at the table reaches for a wing, looks at the vegan, and says, “dude, chill, we get it, you don’t eat meat, blah blah blah. You don’t have to talk about it every 5 minutes! Here’s some bread and butter.”

    • AggressivelyPassive
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      404 months ago

      I have to say, I am yet to encounter a cliche vegan.

      Not a single vegan I’ve ever met brought up the topic, unless there was a reason for it. Like the scenario you described.

      But I’ve met a whole lot of bros who made fun of vegans for existing and being annoying.

      • @frezik@midwest.social
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        34 months ago

        I’ve ran into a few online, but even that’s rare. Agreed that people ranting against this stereotype are far more common than the actual stereotype.

    • @teamevil@lemmy.world
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      144 months ago

      Every vegan that irritated me constantly brought it up…the folks who just did their thing got me curious as to why and educated me on some delicious food despite me not being vegan/vegetarian.

      I will say I think Indian food is the best vegetarian food to the point that it’s just good, you’re not even worried about meat.

    • @starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      4 months ago

      Yep, I don’t eat meat and I don’t recall the last time I actually told someone that unprompted in real life. More likely it’s one of my friends or family that says it for me, like I can’t eat around the bacon that the chef accidentally put on my plate

    • @fishos@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Kinda proving the point tho. The joke was more on Arch users and everyone in here is writing paragraphs defending Gluten Free/Vegan. But, like the meme is pointing out, you just gotta talk about it! 😂

      • @starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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        104 months ago

        “Haha vegans never stop talking about themselves!”

        Hey can you stop making fun of us?

        “Haha look at this, yet another vegan who can’t shut up!”

        • @fishos@lemmy.world
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          24 months ago

          It’s more like “Hey, don’t Arch users totally fit this stereotype?”, but again, look how defensive you get. It’s hilarious that you don’t see the irony. The joke literally starts with “Arch users…”, but you zero in on the vegan part. You didn’t even need to comment. You could’ve just downvoted and moved on.

          I really hope you can appreciate the irony. Humor is good for the soul, buddy.

            • @fishos@lemmy.world
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              24 months ago

              Ever hear a completely accurate and factual joke? They’re boring. Just admit you don’t like the joke and move on. You don’t need to further the very stereotype you hate so much.

              That’s the irony part that you’re just not getting.

      • @JohnnyCanuck@lemmy.ca
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        24 months ago

        I have never once been accosted by or have accosted vegans on their dietary preference

        Congratulations, I wasn’t talking about you specifically because I don’t know you specifically.

        Your imagination is perpetuating the myth of the vast majority of people caring about an individual’s dietary preferences.

        No, I’m reversing the myth OP was perpetuating that vegans talk about being vegans constantly. There is no myth that “the vast majority of people care about an individual’s dietary preferences.” I’m using hyperbole to demonstrate what would happen if in a hypothetical situation where a vegan didn’t mention that they were vegan to explain why they weren’t eating meat. The hyperbole comes from the non-vegans not understanding why someone would not eat meat, forcing the vegan to announce themselves. Suddenly, the vegan, despite all their efforts not to, has perpetuated the myth that vegans constantly talk about vegans. In the hyperbolic situation - being used to demonstrate the inanity of the vegans-always-talk-about-being-vegans myth - the non-vegans represent people who perpetrate that myth.

        Thankfully, that’s not you. Sorry if you felt attacked.

  • TurboWafflz
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    554 months ago

    You do realize that people with celiac disease aren’t just choosing to not eat gluten right?

    • @Jesus_666@feddit.de
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      364 months ago

      True, but those are not the people the men’s is making fun of. It makes fun of perfectly healthy people who decide they need gluten free everything because they heard that gluten is bad and they can’t do any research on how and why. Same with vegans who are only vegan because it’s trendy (and who probably cheat every other meal because a vegan lifestyle actually requires a fair amount of effort and learning about nutrition).

      • @mathemachristian@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        a vegan lifestyle actually requires a fair amount of effort and learning about nutrition

        I was actually surprised by how little effort it really took? Like replace butter with margarine, slave milk with oatmilk and, unless you’re baking, eggs aren’t actually that important.

        The rest is just choosing different meals. Roasted vegetables, fried rice, bulgur, beans etc. instead of steak or sausages or what have you. Get some starchy stuff, some veggy stuff, some proteiny stuff = heathy meal. Most nonvegans live less healthy than that. Then there really is only the B12 debate left, and if you want to err on the safe side just take some supplements. They’re really cheap.

        Sure, it wasn’t 0 effort, but it wasn’t exactly rocket science either. Just kind of look at what you’re eating, throw out the non-vegan stuff and go from there. If you have any qualms about the exploitation of beings with a consciousness, who can feel the pain and suffering when their kids are killed just give it a try.

        • AggressivelyPassive
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          74 months ago

          It’s actually not quite as easy, you do have to at least get a rough understanding of what you need and where to get it.

          Especially for women, iron deficiency is a real problem. For some reason, they lose a bunch of iron every month and that needs to be replaced. A lot of women are running low on iron even with “conventional” diets, so dumping all the iron rich animal products can be a problem.

          It’s far from impossible, but you have to educate yourself a bit about your needs.

          • @mathemachristian@lemm.ee
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            94 months ago

            But thats true about nutrition in general. A lot of people have deficiencies without being vegan, this stereotype that veganism is somehow dangerous unless you know what you’re doing is just wrong. People need to be more educated about nutrition in general independently of veganism.

      • @owatnext@lemmy.world
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        34 months ago

        a vegan lifestyle actually requires a fair amount of effort

        It isn’t that hard in most “well developed” (sorry to use that term) places. Sure, you have to look at some nutrition labels and maybe take a B vitamin, but it isn’t arduous. Took me next to no effort, but going from ~18 years vegetarian to a vegan diet wasn’t hard for me personally.

    • @lengau@midwest.social
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      134 months ago

      The people being mocked are the ones who have made “gluten free” trendy and that labelling far less reliable for folks with celiac.

      • @MadBob@feddit.nl
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        54 months ago

        On the contrary, since gluten-free food became trendy, there’s been more of it on offer, which is better people with coeliac disease. The problem arises when chefs and cooks start thinking gluten-intolerant people are asking for gluten-free food because it’s trendy, so they decide to just run the risk of poisoning someone because they think they know better. I used to have a chef like this, and he ended up poisoning someone. Massive cunt, he was.

    • Fudoshin ️🏳️‍🌈
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      34 months ago

      I mean you can choose to power through it. I’d sooner have a windy, achy gut than eat a gluten-free yum yum.

      Have you ever had gluten free pastry?

      It’s like someone gave aids and bone cancer to dog shit. 🤢

      • @Byter@lemmy.one
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        124 months ago

        Please inform yourself before diminishing others’ plights.

        Diarrhoea that is characteristic of coeliac disease is chronic, sometimes pale, of large volume, and abnormally foul in odor. Abdominal pain, cramping, bloating with abdominal distension (thought to be the result of fermentative production of bowel gas), and mouth ulcers[35] may be present.

        Coeliac disease leads to an increased risk of both adenocarcinoma and lymphoma of the small bowel

        Long-standing and untreated disease may lead to other complications, such as ulcerative jejunitis (ulcer formation of the small bowel) and stricturing (narrowing as a result of scarring with obstruction of the bowel).

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coeliac_disease

      • @Salix@sh.itjust.works
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        4 months ago

        Have you ever had gluten free pastry?

        Yes, I’ve had gluten-free pastries before. My friend has Celiac and can’t consume gluten due to possible intestinal damage.

        He has taken me to delicious gluten-free bakeries to get ice cream cookie sandwiches, pumpkin bread, brownies, garlic parmesan bread, quiche, meat handpies, etc

        Just because you had bad ones doesn’t mean they are all bad. Same goes with other food.

        I mean you can choose to power through it. I’d sooner have a windy, achy gut than eat a gluten-free yum yum.

        Well, if you had celiac disease, good luck living with permanent damage to your intestinal villi.

      • Thorned_Rose
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        24 months ago

        Are you seriously comparing devastating and life threatening diseases and bodily waste to food that thousands of people eat every day without complaint?

  • kbal
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    4 months ago

    I’ve met quite a few vegans and far as I know none of them avoid gluten. I also know someone with celiac disease, who would never even contemplate going vegan when he already has so many dietary restrictions to put up with.

    They’re not absolutely mutually exclusive groups, but pretty close to it I think. Slackware users who install everything through Snap are the real gluten-free vegans of the linux world.

    • @flora_explora@beehaw.org
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      74 months ago

      Hail Seitan! --> many vegans (including myself) swear on pure gluten :D

      And yes, I also know people who also cannot be vegan because of all their dietary restrictions.

      I guess the similarity of arch users and vegans lies in the fact that both groups are very much outside the norm. So you often have to distance yourself from the assumed default (windows/apple computer, omnivore diet). And just talking with other people, it comes up often by itself. If someone asks me to fix their windows PC, I have to tell them that I haven’t really used windows for nearly a decade now. And if someone invites me over or to a restaurant, I have to tell them that I’m vegan. But people who are inside the norm often don’t deal very well with outsiders, so they have to invent tropes like the annoying vegan. What is actually annoying them is their own double standard they have to live with (torturing/killing animals and having a large ecological impact vs wanting to be a good human being).

      But obviously there are also some people who use arch or are vegan and do it to provoke a reaction, to feel special and morally superior.

  • unalivejoy
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    4 months ago

    I think FreeBSD users are the literal gluten free vegans of the Linux community. That is if you want to consider them part of the community.

    They don’t use Linux and they don’t use glibc.

    • TurboWafflz
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      44 months ago

      I feel like with this analogy that would be like saying vegans are part of the meat community which I would assume most people would disagree with.

    • @iiGxC@slrpnk.net
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      4 months ago

      What can I say? Everytime I get an update I get a little spike in dopamine. Arch is perfect for that

      I also get a little spike in dopamine every time I don’t hurt an animal. That’s why I’m vegan too 😎 don’t even get me started on the “b12-less buzz” 😏

    • @0x4A6F6579@lemm.ee
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      94 months ago

      The 2 best features that I love and cannot live without anymore are having a rolling release that doesn’t break every single time I try to do a distro upgrade, and the AUR. I use Arch btw.

      • @octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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        54 months ago

        Preach. (Though I haven’t used pure Arch in a long time.)

        Rolling distros have been all I’ve run for at least the past 6 or 7 years, and I essentially never do a fresh install anymore unless I get new hardware. It’s a lovely, low maintenance place to be, and I’ve always got fresh versions of all the software I use.

        • The_Pete
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          34 months ago

          I have a roughly 13 year old install that I’ve moved through the transition to /usr/ and from sysv to systemd. Its my oldest install. I run almost everything except suse as a systems admin.

          As a way to run Linux, I find arch one of the nicest. Rolling release, unmodified packages direct from the dev, unopinionated systems management, arch build system for any packages you want to compile, arch Linux archive that can be used for snapshotting or locking your rolling release, and AUR.

          It’s a completely different way to manage and build an OS that no one else is really doing. I find team ‘I use arch btw’ to be extremely annoying but at the end of the day, the arch tooling for building a Linux ypunlike to use means that people are naturally going to want to tell you they built something they find enjoyable to use. That’s not really something a lot of people say about most OSs.

          I have a range of issues and annoyances with most major OS, ranging from i cant use this to i wish this worked. Windows, MacOS, Ubuntu/deb flavors, redhat/fedora flavors, openwrt, alpine and other busybox flavors, iOS, Android, Graphine. All have things that mostly work but I’m always working around something.

          And finding accurate documentation for issues on distros that have different configuration release to release is a pain, deb, Ubuntu and redhat flavors are especially egregious. I don’t really care how to do this on RH6 or Ubuntu 11, lol, I want docs for the current version.

          • @octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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            4 months ago

            It’s a completely different way to manage and build an OS that no one else is really doing. I find team ‘I use arch btw’ to be extremely annoying but at the end of the day, the arch tooling for building a Linux ypunlike to use means that people are naturally going to want to tell you they built something they find enjoyable to use. That’s not really something a lot of people say about most OSs.

            I wanted to try to find a way to say this in reply to some of the other comments, but I wasn’t sure I could communicate it effectively without just sounding like I was living up to the meme. You did a better job than I would have. :)

            I have a roughly 13 year old install that I’ve moved through the transition to /usr/ and from sysv to systemd.

            Whew! I’m aware of both those transitions, and was an arch user during one of them, but that’s super impressive. My oldest install is from 2020, endeavouros on a headless media server in my basement. Not even close!

            • The_Pete
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              24 months ago

              Yeah, I that nk a lot of people ‘get it’ but can’t quite explain it. So they tell you they use arch and they they are excited about it.

              I’m a pro, I’ve used basically every type of Linuxevwr made. Ive built and run linux from wcratch multiole times, as a lewrning experience, a teaching experience and even protypes for production systrms. I understand the packaging philosophies, I understand the opinionated administration decisions. I’m subscribed to most major distro mailing lists and i understand the political motivations that drive various teams to the different technical decisions.

              Arch isn’t for everyone. And I’m totally fine with that. But it is perfect for people who want to build something with well crafted and unopinionated tooling. Of everyone ‘got’ arch they’d be failing at what they ate trying to do.

    • TurboWafflz
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      54 months ago

      I switched from arch to opensuse tumbleweed, and even though I really like opensuse, arch was so much simpler to maintain, pacman is so much better than zypper. I disliked arch until I gave it a real try, but even though I’ve moved on for now on my main computer, arch is stil a really good distribution if you know how to set it up

      • @octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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        4 months ago

        You might want to have a look at endeavouros if you consider coming back. It does a lot of the heavy lifting for you. I’ve got arch, manjaro, antergos in my background as far as arch-based distros I’ve tried over the years, and have not had major problems with any of them, but endeavouros is an easy install with some conservative defaults. I had only a couple things to add on afterward to get it just how I wanted, you have a fair bit of control at install time, and once installed it’s just like maintaining an arch system.

        • TurboWafflz
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          34 months ago

          No I have no trouble using arch and I still use it on my laptop, I just like opensuse because it’s fun so I use that on my main computer now

          • @octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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            14 months ago

            No worries. For me, the the fun of installing wore off after a couple times, so I have stuck with derivatives in recent years, but I get it. :)

            • @DrRatso@lemmy.ml
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              4 months ago

              Theres no real reason to manually install arch anymore though, archinstall script is easy, and works well. Yea you don’t get a fancy GUI, but there are plenty of options to choose at install time.

  • @sebsch@discuss.tchncs.de
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    124 months ago

    Op neither likes people decided to not kill animals nor people using community driven distributions.

    You could have used the original meme. The mindset matches

    • @BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
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      44 months ago

      “Gluten Free Vegans” at that. OP doesn’t dislike animal rights, they just specifically dislike people with a potentially life-threatening allergy standing up for animal rights.

      Let’s be honest though, they’ve just written both off as “overly restrictive fad diets followed by people who annoy me by talking about their lifestyles”

      OP is the human embodiment of a conservative stand-up comedian, or as Tim Heidecker put it

  • sunnie
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    4 months ago

    this isn’t true imo. not because it was never the case, but because nowadays arch is so easy to use it’s a perfectly normal thing to do, “i use arch btw” isn’t a shocking statement

    the gluten free vegans of the computing world are NixOS users

    • @flashgnash@lemm.ee
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      14 months ago

      Arch is/was elitist for the sake of elitism, NixOS genuinely makes managing my systems less of a headache

    • @Mycatiskai@lemmy.ca
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      104 months ago

      Those who want to spread the good news about cold water spraying on your dirty rosebud would give a shit. At least they would like to tell you about the life changing bidet.

      • @BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
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        14 months ago

        You clearly used one of those adapters for a regular toilet. If you do it right, and get the new plumbing installed and an actual bidet, you can have confortable temperature water spraying on your dirty rosebud.

        Also no, I don’t own one… yet. I’ve just looked into it.

        • @Mycatiskai@lemmy.ca
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          14 months ago

          I have had both a cold water one and a dual temp bidet. By the time the water heated up I’m clean so I decided not to even bother hooking the hot water up.

      • All glory to the bidet!

        Me and my friends converted a few years back and we used to sing over Michael Jackson “Beat it” but with “Bidet” instead.

        There is no way back for us.