Personally I will not eat anything with the may contain label. I know this just means it is made in the same factory but I was wondering if I have just been overly cautious. What do you all think? Do you avoid stuff like that or do you think it is fine?

  • @sjmulder
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    1 year ago

    I don’t avoid those products. Vegan products from factories or production lines that are also being used to processed animal products do not cause harm to animals - the other products did.

    • LaGG_3 [he/him, comrade/them]
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      81 year ago

      Right, it means that the equipment used to produce the food has also been used to produce foods containing whatever.

      It’s a low but nonzero risk so they label it.

      Would you eat food from a kitchen that has also produced non vegan food? You’ll probably have a similar answer.

  • MamaVomit [he/him]
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    101 year ago

    Personally, I don’t avoid it. The FDA (if you’re in the US) allows a certain amount of insect parts and other contaminants, and no labels list those. I assume if they’re in there at all, it’s really a minuscule amount. Plus, you aren’t patronizing the factory, so you’re only supporting the vegan brand that happens to use that factory.

  • Maoo [none/use name]
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    61 year ago

    It’s intended for people with allergies to those things.

    If you avoid buying products from companies that also participate in the meat/dairy industry, then it makes sense and is consistent to avoid food with that labels. Though I’d also say that there’s a lot of other research you’d want to do, as there are meat/dairy companies that own vegan food facilities that don’t need those labels.

    I don’t avoid the stuff because I don’t even trust it very much to begin with and I don’t have the time or even ability to investigate supply chains sufficiently. I put my beeny efforts into spreading the good word! I also mostly just try to make food at home from scratch, it eliminates a lot (not all) of thinking about “ethical” consumption.