This post by Peter Hurford presents a somewhat similar case.
Things which I found lacking (both in your post and in Peter’s), which were my cruxes, are the comparison to ACE recommended charities, and more concrete ways of making it easier (it seems that you are not engaging with what makes the transition difficult).
One argument I come across is that apart from being symbolic, individual action does not help #1,2 and 3. Elaboration / links to articles that try to quantify the “real” individual effect could probably make the case more persuasive.
If the “real” impact is small then one could argue that the slight inconvenience in following a vegan benifit is comparable to the small benifit that individual action results in.
This post by Peter Hurford presents a somewhat similar case.
Things which I found lacking (both in your post and in Peter’s), which were my cruxes, are the comparison to ACE recommended charities, and more concrete ways of making it easier (it seems that you are not engaging with what makes the transition difficult).
Thanks for sharing this.
One argument I come across is that apart from being symbolic, individual action does not help #1,2 and 3. Elaboration / links to articles that try to quantify the “real” individual effect could probably make the case more persuasive.
If the “real” impact is small then one could argue that the slight inconvenience in following a vegan benifit is comparable to the small benifit that individual action results in.