We’re seeking to
create a humane society,
and there’s no way
to do that without
thinking more broadly
about community,
and the animals are
part of our community.
Welcome gracious viewers
to Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Today we are proud
to present the first
in a two-part program
on Mr. Wayne Pacelle,
president and
chief executive officer
of the Humane Society
of the United States
and author
of the best-selling book
“The Bond: Our Kinship
with Animals, Our Call
to Defend Them.”
With a mission
of “celebrating animals
and confronting cruelty,”
the Humane Society
strives to build
a compassionate world
where all animals are our
cherished co-inhabitants,
free to live
without fear of abuse,
exploitation or neglect.
As leader of
the largest organization
in the United States
dedicated to
animal protection,
Mr. Pacelle, a vegan, works
to constructively shape
animal-human relations.
He has secured
lasting victories
for our animal friends
in federal and state
legislatures as well as
courtrooms and boardrooms
across the nation.
An animal lover
from childhood
and passionate advocate
for animal rights
throughout his career,
Mr. Pacelle tells us about
his early involvement
in animal welfare causes
and his decision
to become vegan.
I had a kinship
with animals
from a very young age.
I mean
my mother would tell you
when I was three or four,
I was very focused
on animals.
And I believe
that we have a bond
with other creatures,
I actually just wrote
a book called “The Bond,”
and it explores
and explains why we’re
so connected to animals,
and why
a three or four year-old
with really no inculcation
and no direction
in terms of kind of
an active compassion
for animals,
felt this fellow feeling
for other creatures.
And as that,
feeling just really
got imbedded in me,
as I got older, I began to
make some connections,
and it just continued
to grow, and
become more powerful.
And when I was
a college student,
I started an animal
protection organization
to work against
factory farming, and
other abuses of animals,
that’s when
I became vegan, when
I was 19 years of age.
And I felt that this was
really my life’s calling,
was to speak up for
these creatures who can’t
speak for themselves.
A long-standing champion
of the voiceless,
Mr. Pacelle believes
humans have a duty
of care and responsibility
towards all the animals
with whom
we share our Earth.
In the relationship we have
with other creatures,
we have all the power, and
we should use our power
not just to advance
our own economic gain
or selfish interest,
but to be good
to other animals
and to be altruistic
and other-centered.
And I’ve often felt that
how we treat animals
is a basic test
of our character, because
they are so vulnerable,
and they are so weak,
compared to
how strong we are, that
it really is a reflection of
the decency and restraint
that we’re capable of.
The Humane Society has
successfully campaigned
for the passage
of hundreds of new state
and federal laws that
safeguard animal lives.
As the group’s president,
Wayne Pacelle has testified
before the US Congress
on the urgent need
for greater recognition
of animal rights and
animal industry reforms.
Well, I do believe
that if we’re going
to be active on
animal protection issues,
we need to take steps
in our personal lives to
kind of wring the cruelty
out of our lives,
and the daily behaviors
that we engage in, whether
it’s food or clothing
or buying products
tested on animals,
and opting
for the alternatives.
But we also need to look
at this on a macro level,
and we need
to prevent cruelty
from happening
in the first place.
So we need
to strengthen policies
to protect animals,
and inevitably
that leads us to the local,
state, federal and even
international bodies that
can address these issues
of how animals are treated,
and to have certain
standards that exist.
So I’m very focused on
getting new laws passed
to protect animals,
and I have been
fortunate enough
to work in Congress
to help pass
a couple of dozen laws,
and more than
a thousand laws
at the state level,
including about
30 ballot initiatives
where the citizens
are organized
to adopt policies
to say stop factory farming
or outlaw cockfighting,
or stop bear baiting,
or other
inhumane practices.
So, I want to appeal directly
to the people in power.
So testifying before
Senate committees
or US House committees
has been a way
to transmit our message,
and really make
a compelling case
that animals matter,
and that we have
responsibilities
to be decent to them.
If we have
anti-cruelty statutes
that are already accepted
in America and in countries
throughout the world,
then that standard needs
to be logically applied,
and it needs to be applied
even to settings where
the conduct that we exhibit
toward animals is legal,
but it's very harmful
to the animals
like factory farming.
Under
Mr. Pacelle’s leadership,
the Humane Society
is working throughout
the United States
to stop the mistreatment
of animals.
The organization has also
extended its operations
across the globe to address
animal welfare issues.
We have a network
of organizations now
that operate
under one umbrella.
And one
of our organizations
is Humane Society
International,
because we’ve realized
that animal cruelty
doesn't stop
at a nation’s boundaries,
and in the era
of globalization,
and in an era of
so much worldwide travel
and the Internet,
these industries that are
causing harm to animals
are operating
on that global scale,
and we need to be able to
meet them and challenge
what they’re doing,
and show a different
and a better way of
interacting with animals,
and to move away
from this model
of exploitation and harm,
and move toward
compassion and mercy
and goodness
toward all animals.
Since Mr. Pacelle’s
appointment as president
in 2004,
the Humane Society
has introduced
bold new initiatives
and accomplished much
in the realm of bettering
the well-being of wildlife
and companion animals
including
freeing many imprisoned
in research facilities.
Notable accomplishments
include the group playing
an instrumental role
in banning
“Internet hunting”
in nearly all states
in the US.
Internet hunting involves
remotely shooting animals
with a real gun by using
a computer and webcams.
Also the Humane Society
assisted in
the successful evacuation
of thousands of animals
following Hurricane Katrina
which devastated
the southeastern US
in 2005.
In part due to the efforts
of the organization,
the Pets Evacuation and
Transportation Standards
(PETS) Act
become federal law
in 2006 and requires
local and state agencies
to plan for the rescue,
care and shelter
of companion animals
following disasters.
Mr. Pacelle has been lauded
for his achievements
in crafting, qualifying,
and passing
animal-related
state ballot initiatives.
Thanks to his leadership,
voters in the state
of Missouri enacted a law
in 2010 addressing cruelty
in puppy mills and
California voters passed
“Proposition 2” in 2008
which ended
the intensive confinement
of 20 million
farm animals in the state.
What lies ahead
for the Humane Society
of the United States?
Mr. Pacelle shared with us
some of the group’s
upcoming projects
and long-term objectives.
Science is also going
to allow us to innovate
and really leave behind
methods that we thought
were indispensable
or central at one point,
and now just look like
acts of cruelty with
new technologies ahead.
So, I think
that we’ve got to address
the massive killing
and inhumane treatment
of animals in agriculture.
Ten billion animals a year
killed in the United States,
65 billion worldwide.
The billions
of sea creatures
who are also victims,
not just the fish
who are used for food,
but the so-called bycatch,
the collateral damage
from all of these
industrial fishing practices
like sea turtles
being killed or sea birds
like Albatrosses.
So we’re going
to address that,
we’re going to crack down
on puppy mills,
we want to eliminate
animal fighting,
dogfighting and
cockfighting worldwide.
We want to stop the trade
in wildlife parts
and products,
like elephant ivory,
and rhino horn and
the skins of many species
throughout the world,
many of whom
are in danger.
So it’s a very broad agenda.
We are concerned
about all animals, and
our mission statement
is celebrating animals,
and confronting cruelty.
So those are
our twin focuses,
we want to celebrate
the positive expression of
the human-animal bond,
and we want to
recognize the attributes,
the cognitive qualities
of these animals.
At the same time, when
people use their power
in a way that’s harmful
to animals, we want
to try to stop that.
We want to show them
the better way.
So confronting cruelty
is central to our mission.
We end our show today
with a note of optimism
from Wayne Pacelle
regarding the future of
animal-human relations.
I think that
more and more people
are recognizing
their own responsibilities
to other creatures,
that these other creatures
are conscious, aware,
thinking, feeling beings,
and they have the same
spark of life that we have,
they have the same will
to live that we have,
they have the same wish
to avoid pain and suffering
that we do.
And once we are alert
to their needs
and to their wants,
then I think decent people
are going to act
in a better way.
And a lot of people
can characterize it
in different ways.
They can say that
the animals have rights,
or they can talk about
how this framework
works for them.
But ultimately this is
really more about us
than it is about them.
It’s about our
being responsible and
exhibiting a lighter step
on the planet.
Thank you Mr. Pacelle
for all that you
and the Humane Society
of the United States
volunteers do for animals
in the US as well as
around the globe.
We share your view that
animals and humans have
a shining future together,
filled with peace
and harmony.
For more details
on the Humane Society
of the United States,
please visit
Mr. Pacelle’s book
“The Bond”
is available at
Wonderful viewers,
please join us tomorrow
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
for the conclusion
of our two-part program
when we will speak
with Wayne Pacelle about
his bestselling new book
“The Bond: Our Kinship
with Animals, Our Call
to Defend Them.”
We will also have
highlights from
the 2011 Genesis Awards,
a Humane Society
sponsored event that
recognizes major news
and entertainment media
for producing
outstanding works that
raise public awareness
of animal issues.
Thank you
for your company today
on our program.
Coming up next is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May Heaven grace us all
with beauty, wisdom,
strength and kindness.
Welcome
good-hearted viewers
to Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Today we are proud
to present the conclusion
of a two-part program
on Mr. Wayne Pacelle,
president and
chief executive officer
of the Humane Society
of the United States.
A highly sought after
media commentator,
columnist and contributor
to numerous newspapers,
journals and magazines,
Mr. Pacelle released
a book in April 2011,
entitled
“The Bond: Our Kinship
with Animals, Our Call
to Defend Them.”
The bestseller is highly
lauded by noted authors
and animal welfare
advocates, including
Dr. Jane Goodall,
founder of the
Jane Goodall Institute
and a United Nations
Messenger of Peace.
In many ways this was
a life’s work for me,
and I explore this kinship
that we have
toward other creatures,
something that really
gives us a head start
in our good relationships
with animals.
But I also talk in the book
how the bond
has been broken,
how we’re really
not living up to
the standards of humanity,
by exploiting animals
in agriculture
and other settings.
And in the end
I really talk about how
we can restore the bond
and how we can
re-establish a good and
appropriate relationship
with other creatures.
And I talk about
the humane economy,
a way to value animals
appropriately,
a way to conduct
business and industry
without leaving a trail
of animal victims,
and it's a way that I think
ultimately is going to be
more profitable,
it's going to be
more sustainable,
and it's going to allow us
to reclaim
our full humanity.
So I’m very excited
about that.
With a career devoted to
the pursuit of bettering
animal well-being,
it is clear that Mr. Pacelle
holds a deep affinity
and close connection
with many members
of the animal kingdom.
I’ve had the pleasure
of going to thousands
of animal sanctuaries
and meeting pigs
and meeting cows
who’ve grown up.
They were veal calves,
they were supposed
to have been killed
at 16 weeks of age
or 20 (weeks)
and now they’re
these giant creatures.
There have been
so many things
that I’ve seen and done
and in every case
I just recognize that
each individual creature
is an individual.
They have their own
independent existence,
they have their own
personalities.
We happen to be
the most dominant,
powerful species
on the planet
because of our mind.
But let’s use our mind
for the good,
let’s figure out ways to
live with other creatures,
rather than figure out ways
to cause them harm.
I mean that’s
the beautiful expression
of human creativity and
innovation, not this way
of figuring out ways
to plunder animals
and the rest
of the natural world.
The Humane Society
of the United States
hosts an annual
Hollywood gala called
the Genesis Awards.
The awards recognize
major news and
entertainment media
for producing
outstanding works that
raise public awareness
of animal issues.
Past ceremonies
have featured
celebrity presenters
such as Christian Bale,
Pierce Brosnan,
Ellen DeGeneres,
Melanie Griffith,
Teri Hatcher,
Isabella Rossellini,
Martin Sheen,
Alicia Silverstone,
Amy Smart
and William Shatner.
We asked Mr. Pacelle
for his perspective
on film and television
celebrities’ understanding
of animal welfare issues.
I think people within
the artistic community
have always been
very sensitive to animals
as a general proposition.
You have seen
a greater awareness
among that sub-group
in society than
many other sub-groups
or the population at large.
So, I think we kind of had
a head start, and I think
there’s a lot of empathy
and kindness.
The 2011 Genesis Awards,
the 25th anniversary
of the event,
was held in March 2011.
The Wyler Award,
one of the most
prestigious awards given,
was presented
to Hollywood actress
Kristin Davis
for her ongoing support
of the David Sheldrick
Wildlife Trust
which rescues and cares
for baby elephants
and rhinos in Kenya
who have been orphaned
due to the actions of ivory
and rhino horn poachers.
The sad thing that
I’ve seen unfortunately
since I’ve been aware,
is this huge increase
in poaching of elephants
for their ivory, and
America unfortunately is
the second biggest market
for ivory products,
second only to China.
And people don’t think
that this is still happening,
but it’s happening
because the people
on the black market say
that it’s antique ivory,
but it isn’t.
So don’t buy ivory
products of any kind,
because it’s having
a very real effect in that
it’s making the people
illegally go out
and kill the elephants and
leave their babies behind,
and elephants could be
gone from the planet
in the wild,
and that’s not right.
What can we do to help?
Don’t buy ivory,
number one.
Number two, don’t buy
black rhino horn,
not that you would,
but just don’t, in case
you thought about it.
And then you can support
the Sheldrick Foundation
by being an adoptive parent
of a black rhino
or an elephant.
Let’s meet some
of the other luminaries
who were in attendance
starting with
Hollywood actress
Charlotte Ross who
starred in the popular
American television
police drama NYPD Blue.
What animal welfare
projects
are you involved in?
Currently
I’m the spokesperson
for Operation Blankets
of Love, which is
this really wonderful
grassroots organization
that’s now growing.
And what they do
is very simplistic, but
it make a huge difference,
and that is they bring
blankets and towels
to the shelter animals that
are on cold cement floors
that are oftentimes wet.
Tonight they are serving
a gourmet vegan dinner.
What do you think about
the vegan diet?
It’s awesome!
I think people
that don’t know about it,
don’t know
how great it is.
I certainly feel better
when I’m not eating meat.
I just feel like
my workouts are better
and I’m emotionally better.
And I’ve learned
to get more creative
with my cooking.
And I love coming
to these events because
you get good vegan food.
Why do you think
it’s important for media,
news and entertainment
to speak out
for the animals?
Because
they don’t have a voice.
Animals, all animals,
every species, none of them
have a voice
and I always say
we’re their voice.
And I think that’s what
a lot of us understand,
the people
that do documentaries,
and do television shows,
and journalists, we know
that we are their voice.
And even if you’re not
on television, you can be
a voice for animals
by volunteering
at the shelters or
traveling to Thailand and
help rescue elephants or
whatever your passion is.
As long as you get out
and volunteer, I think
that’s the message.
In Los Angeles
we have the toughest
spay and neutering law
in the United States.
And we’re working hard
to really promote adoptions.
Do you have any special
animal in your life?
Monkey and Buggy.
Monkey’s our dog
and Buggy is our cat.
Supreme Master Ching Hai
was invited to
the 2011 Genesis Awards,
but was regretfully
unable to attend due to
prior commitments.
The following is
an excerpt of a letter
she sent to the organizers.
It is a great honor
to be considered for
such an illustrious event,
I truly feel sorry
that I cannot be there
in praise of
all the wonderful people,
journalists and media
groups that promote
the humane treatment
of animals.
We all can only do our
small part, yet together,
through groups
such as yours;
we are a powerful
and united voice for the
protection of all beings.
To help you
in continuing to do
such noble deeds,
our association
would like to
contribute $50,000
to further your
outstanding efforts
and help with
purchasing medicine
and vegan food
for the animals
under your care.
Again, please accept
my heartfelt appreciation
for your invitation
and apologies for
not being able to attend.
Wishing you all my love,
a very memorable night
for all attendees
and the greatest success
that Heaven can bring.
With Great Honor, Love
and Blessings,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
Wayne Pacelle
graciously accepted
Supreme Master
Ching Hai’s donation
on behalf of
the Humane Society.
The animals are part
of our community and
can’t speak like we can,
but they can communicate,
and they richly deserve
their lives
as much as we do.
And we’re really so pleased
not just to get this
financial support which
is so meaningful for us,
but also just to have
the kinship and the support
to protect farm animals
and companion animals
and wildlife.
So Supreme Master,
thank you so much
for your generosity and
also for doing so much
within your community
and with your own talents
to spread the word
about animal protection.
We thank you
on behalf of the entire
Humane Society of
the United States family
for what you’ve done
for us, and
we look forward to
a long and fruitful
relationship together
to advance these ideals,
which mean so much
to us personally
as well as institutionally.
So I want
to thank you very much,
and we’re really
excited about
getting the message out.
We also talk about
the principle
of animal protection
being a universal value,
that it’s not just a province
of any one race or nation
or community.
This is a global sensibility,
and it is so important
that we reach people
in all parts of the world
with these ideas, and
we thank you for helping
to spread that message.
Thank you.
On Supreme Master
Ching Hai’s behalf,
our local
Association members
presented Mr. Pacelle
with a copy of her book
“From Crisis to Peace –
The Organic Vegan Way
Is the Answer” as well as
a DVD featuring the
“Gifting Peace” concert,
a celebration
of Supreme Master
Television’s
4th anniversary.
Mr. Pacelle later sent
Supreme Master
Ching Hai
an autographed copy of
“The Bond,”
with a warm note
written inside:
“Supreme Master
Ching Hai –
Thanks for the
incredible leadership
+ vision you provide
throughout the world!
You are an inspiration.
Wayne Pacelle
4/13/11
Also following
the Genesis Awards,
Deborah Peeples,
Vice President
of Philanthropy
at the Humane Society,
sent Supreme Master
Ching Hai a kind letter,
the following of
which is a brief excerpt.
Dear Supreme Master
Ching Hai,
On behalf of our Board,
staff and the animals
for whom we work,
please accept my
deep appreciation
for your generous gift
of $50,000 to
The Humane Society
of the United States
(HSUS), received
on March 21, 2011,
and for your lovely letter.
As you requested,
your gift will be used
for medicine and
vegan food for animals
under our care.
We so appreciate your
recognition of our work.
With warmest regards,
Deborah Peeples
Vice President,
Philanthropy
Wayne Pacelle,
we are sure
the Humane Society
will continue
to spread the good news
to people everywhere
that animals deserve
only kindness and love
and we are truly proud
of your organization’s
many achievements
in the area
of animal protection.
For more details
on the Humane Society
of the United States,
please visit
www.HumaneSociety.org
Mr. Pacelle’s book
“The Bond”
is available at
www.Amazon.com
Thank you
for your company today
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Coming up is
Enlightening Entertainment,
after Noteworthy News.
May we always
remind ourselves
of the bountiful blessings
from Heaven.