Wednesday, July 20, 2005 by Mike Adams, the Health Ranger Editor of NaturalNews.com (See all articles...) Tags: health news, Natural News, nutrition |
The move is designed to address the problem of growing consumer distrust of the way the terms are used by food manufacturers. The FSA believes that the main reason for this distrust is the lack of a universally accepted definition of what constitutes a food that is suitable for a vegetarian or vegan diet.
The FSA says that it was relatively easy to reach agreement from stakeholders ( manufacturers, vegetarian and vegan organisations, and religious groups ) on use of the term vegan broadly, the exclusion of any foods made from, or with, animals or animal products.
The term vegetarian was more difficult to define.
Tony Bishop Weston Author of Vegan ( ISBN 0600611906 ) says "Vegetarianism's bottom line depends on the theory of avoiding the responsibility of having to directly kill something in order to obtain the product - it's not really about cruelty"
Therefore despite the fact that millions of calves are killed to allow a cow to provide milk, or millions of useless male chicks are crushed and gassed to allow egg laying hens - in theory you don't have to kill them.
These milk and egg by products have no commercial value so ironically if you didn't kill them they would probably just be allowed to slowly starve to death.
Far more vegetarians ( up to 40% ) are vegetarian for health reasons and no wonder, there is lots of research to prove how healthy the vegetarian diet is.
Tony says "Vegans are more likely to be vegan for ethical reasons although if properly planned a varied Vegan diet could be one of the healthiest meal plans on the planet."
"Vegans do particularly well at avoiding heart disease and strokes." says Yvonne Bishop-Weston a London Nutritionist.
One of the problems of a definition for vegetarianism is that many people who are vegetarian for religious reasons don't condone the use of eggs whilst the UK Vegetarian Society's standards accept eggs if they are Free Range.
Representative from The Young Indian Vegetarian Nitin Mehta conceded it may be easier and simpler for indian vegetarians to look for products labelled as vegan.
The FSA labelling guidance is only really a reflection of public opinion. The UK Vegetarian Society is meanwhile trying to push an early day motion through the UK Parliament to get a legal definition of vegetarian.
Manufacturers needing expert advice and assistance on vegetarian and vegan symbols and labelling should contact PEA PR for guidance.
Get independent news alerts on natural cures, food lab tests, cannabis medicine, science, robotics, drones, privacy and more.
Permalink to this article:
Embed article link: (copy HTML code below):
Reprinting this article:
Non-commercial use OK, cite NaturalNews.com with clickable link.
Follow Natural News on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus, and Pinterest
"Big Tech and mainstream media are constantly trying to silence the independent voices that dare to bring you the truth about toxic food ingredients, dangerous medications and the failed, fraudulent science of the profit-driven medical establishment.
Email is one of the best ways to make sure you stay informed, without the censorship of the tech giants (Google, Apple, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, etc.). Stay informed and you'll even likely learn information that may help save your own life."
–The Health Ranger, Mike Adams