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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: November 29th, 2024

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  • My point is just that.

    Vegetarian: do everything the same, just don’t put meat in your dishes

    Vegan: your whole paragraph.

    You need to find substitutes for milk to benefit of the additives and need to try out. Took me a long time to find a milk substitute I like. Soy based stuff can cover for Calcium, but soy based stuff is rare in a lot of western diets, so you need to experiment.

    That’s my whole point. Certainly it is doable, but not as plug and play as a vegetarian diet. And, when you don’t try the stuff mentioned in your paragraph and mine, you might run into issues, especially with children. That’s what I am saying, that’s a subjunctive.


  • Depends on which diet you come from. For having a “standard, western, unhealthy diet” changing nothing but avoiding meat: you have no challenges.

    When you take the same diet and substitute all animal products, you could run into issues. Depends on where you’re coming from with your previous diet. Especially true for growing children. But it’s certainly doable, but more effort then just vegetarian.






  • One might argue your job is to do what’s best for the child despite your beliefs.

    That’s what I meant with pretend. What’s best boils down to my beliefs, there is no objective criteria.

    the risks are lower for vegetarians

    No, there are simply no risks in not eating meat. There are risks in eating only potatos, but there’s just as much in eating only bacon. The potential risks in vegetarian and carnivore diet come from not enough diversity. But take a “normal Western” diverse diet, strip out the meat, and you’re perfectly fine in all macro- and micronutrients.

    I’m not OP of this subthread btw. Nobody ever came at me for my children’s diet. Which they honestly should, as we eat way to much pasta, but that’s what’s always accepted 😅


  • Well, I mean, first of all it is my job as a parent to “impose my beliefs and limitations” onto my child. We pretend it’s not, but it is in everything I tell my children.

    And then

    Malnutrition is a very real risk for someone who doesn’t consume meat

    No, it’s not. It can be for vegans. But just not eating meat (aka vegetarian) has no malnutrition risk.




  • I kinda had a similar problem. Never found the root cause, but what did the trick for me was to put an OpenWRT Router between the default ISP router and my home network.

    As I said, I never figured out, why Android did not respect the DHCP settings of the default router, but here we are. Maybe it was some DNS shenanigans by the ISP’s config, maybe it was a wrong DNS/DHCP configs from my side, maybe it was IPv6 shenanigans. Those are the culprits I would investigate from your side.



  • Lots of people recommending a proper domain, I would as well (way easier)

    Just, if you want to go the complete “independent” route: either make sure all the clients you plan to use can just accept self-signded certs and skip validation or you need to create your own CA and import those into your clients.

    Depending on which clients you plan on using that might be impossible (e.g. for some IoT devices, some Smart TVs and such).

    That is why having an proper domain and use LetsEncrypt, ZeroSSL et. al. is way easier.