"Okay."
I mean, if they want to stick to their principles, they can go eat outside. I'm assuming they didn't go off on a tirade or anything. Not any skinoff your back.or scales
nice bait
offering a vegan alternative was more than i would have offered. /shrug.So, I just had a family dinner. My sister and her husband are vegans. The food was delicious oven-baked cod and there were was a vegan alternative for my sister and her husband.
He declared that he would not be able to sit at the same table where dead fish was being consumed and left to eat outside, followed by my sister.
How would you react to this? Would it even be possible to go through life like this? Like, how would you deal with representation dinners as work? Should we as family enable such behaviour? In the real world, such silly behaviour is not acceptable. Your ability to socialize with anyone who is not a vegan would be non-existent.
Sorry, I'm rambling (and a bit upset) and can't really put together a coherent argument. Discuss.
Really? You'd invite your relatives for dinner and not offer them anything to eat? Would you leave peanuts even if someone were allergic?offering a vegan alternative was more than i would have offered. /shrug.
dick move by them.
How would you react to this?
That sounds like the setup to a joke
This would be a perfect opportunity to point out going forward that every other non-food item he touches, sits on or interacts with is not vegan friendly, just to gauge his response. "That's a leather couch. Shouldn't you be sitting on the floor?"
I mean, if you're vegan on a moral basis, that seems fair enough.
Like, would you sit at a table where they're carving up a whole golden retriever like a Christmas ham?
Sounds like maybe you should be a good brother-in-law and respect his choices?
How would you react to this?
He's displaying stereotypical vegan behavior.
I'd continue eating and not care about what they were doing.