PropertyValue
rdfs:label
  • Vegetarian - Nonvegetarian Relations (Vegetarian World)
rdfs:comment
  • Vegetarian - Nonvegetarian Relations vary enormously between nations, regions, and individuals. Thus, this is a complex issue and sweeping generalizations are often not true for a large percentage of the people of a given ethnic group or area. However, as with relations between different ethnic or religious groups, generalizations, though not true every time, can offer some insight.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:alt-history/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:althistory/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
abstract
  • Vegetarian - Nonvegetarian Relations vary enormously between nations, regions, and individuals. Thus, this is a complex issue and sweeping generalizations are often not true for a large percentage of the people of a given ethnic group or area. However, as with relations between different ethnic or religious groups, generalizations, though not true every time, can offer some insight. Vegetarian - Nonvegetarian Relations tend to be peaceful. It could be said that in the vast majority of cases throughout time, vegetarians and nonvegetarians have lived together in harmony and still do. Throughout history, ethnic tensions have largely overridden dietary habits, but sometimes ethnic groups have brought attention to differences between their and their opponents' dietary habits to add fuel to any existing flames and further alienate another group. This has often also resulted in the ethnic group's minorities being marginalized. Lately, there have been more conflicts within single ethnic groups caused purely because of differences of eating habits. This trend has been increasing over the past few decades, as vegetarians have become the majority, with an estimated 58% of all humans being vegetarians by 2007.