Hi, just wondering if fuggs are vegan. As in, do they contain products made from animals?

As far as I can tell, “fuggs” is a portmanteau of “fake” and “uggs”, and so fuggs are “fake” uggs, meaning fake ugg boots. Uggs or ugg boots are a kind of boots traditionally made from sheepskin/shearling, and sometimes with suede leather (cow skin) on the outside.

But there’s a bit of confusion about what “fuggs” or “fake uggs” means. Unlike something such as “faux fur” or “faux/fake leather”, where it’s pretty clear that will be vegan and not made from animals like the traditional kind is, “ugg” has some weird brand authenticity thing going on.

I might get some facts wrong here, but from what I could gather, there are 2 companies, called “UGG” (American brand) and “UGG Since 1974” (Australian brand) which both lay some kind of claim to what can be considered an authentic ugg boot. Uggs were first made in Australia, but I think the American UGG brand often sues other companies, including those in Australia, for using the “ugg” name. However in some places ugg simply means the style of shoe rather than the brand.

So unfortunately due to this, I think there might be 2 different meanings of “fuggs” - one I believe indeed means vegan ugg boots which don’t use animal skins/products, while the other meaning is simply an ugg boot made in the traditional way from animals but just not by the “official” UGG brand.

In all this confusion, how can we truly answer the question of “Are fuggs vegan?” Is the answer somewhere between “They could be, sometimes.” or “No one knows, really.” ?

  • GregorGizeh
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    9 months ago

    Edit: removed my content. Your mods just quietly delete the parts that don’t fit their beliefs anyway, even if it was part of a respectful and informative discussion. I don’t want to provide content for your shitshow

    • F04118F@feddit.nl
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      9 months ago

      The plastic continent is (IIRC) for 98% compose of plastic that comes directly from a few big rivers in Asia, in countries that lack a functional waste disposal. As such, it is unrelated to plastic use in countries that do have a proper waste disposal.

      Microplastics are a valid concern.

      I also agree that the energy shortage is probably temporary, though it will get worse before it gets better. Land and water use will remain problems until we get past the tipping point for veganism. And animal-based leather will increase dramatically in price when dead cow consumption drops.

      FYI I think you bring good arguments with a respectful tone and I’m not the one downvoting you.

    • Lafari@lemmy.worldOP
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      9 months ago

      I would generally agree plastic = bad in most cases, though it’s probably an unavoidable necessity for our modern world. It should be reduced where possible. However, plastic = bad doesn’t change the fact that animal farming is usually far worse for the environment.

      There are 2 “organic” alternatives to synthetic leather (aside from not buying any of them) : plant-based leather or animal-based leather (which is not exactly completely organic or natural considering the plastic coating and chemicals used to preserve and produce it). 1 is better than synthetic leather and 1 is worse. I’ll let you work out which is which :) Spoiler: plant-based comes out on top