Greetings, 
noble-minded viewers. 
Advocacy of 
the plant-based diet 
as the most ecologically 
sensible solution 
has been pioneered by 
numerous environmental, 
animal, spiritual and 
scientific publications 
throughout the years.  
Their efforts 
are bearing fruit as 
evidenced in the recent 
prolific media coverage 
highlighting 
this important issue. 
Through its wide reach, 
mainstream media 
has catapulted 
the vegetarian solution
to climate change 
to the forefront 
of public consciousness. 
From major media 
personalities such as 
Oprah Winfrey 
to Larry King 
to Ellen Degeneres, 
who became vegan 
in the past months, 
the millions of viewers 
around the world 
who tune in daily 
to their shows 
are exposed to the topic 
of meat and its related 
harmful effects on the 
health of the planet and 
one’s personal wellbeing. 
On CNN, 
the world’s first network 
to provide 
24 hour news coverage, 
with programs available 
in over 212 countries 
and territories, 
Larry King brought in 
a panel of experts 
on his show, 
Larry King Live, 
to address 
how E. coli found in meat 
is life-threatening. 
It was revealed that 
many young children 
have suffered and died 
from eating 
E. coli-tainted beef, or 
from merely contacting 
an infected adult. 
In 2007, 
a 22-year-old woman 
became paralyzed 
after eating a burger 
contaminated with E. coli.
Following is the discussion, 
“Should Americans 
Banish the Burger?” 
aired on CNN and 
published on its website 
on October 13, 2009. 
“One person who 
has said "no" to burgers 
is Bill Marler, an expert 
on foodborne illness 
litigation.
"What happens 
in hamburger 
is the E. coli bacteria 
is in the guts of cows. 
And during 
the slaughtering process, 
those guts are nicked 
or there's fecal material 
on the hides. 
It gets on the red meat," 
Marler explained to King. 
For Barbara Kowalcyk, 
the issue is professional –
- she's director of 
food safety at the Center 
for Foodborne Illness 
Research and Prevention. 
But the issue is also 
deeply personal – 
her 2-year-old son, Kevin, 
died of complications 
due to E. coli infection 
in 2001.
Kevin "went from 
being a perfectly healthy, 
beautiful child 
to being dead in 12 days. 
It was unbelievable," 
Kowalcyk told King.
For another guest, 
even the promise of 
contamination-free beef 
wasn't enough. 
Dr. Colin Campbell 
of Cornell University 
advocates a meat-free diet.
Campbell said 
he grew up on a dairy farm 
and for a long time 
held to the belief 
that animal protein 
was an essential part 
of a healthy diet. 
He said the results 
of years of research 
changed his mind.
The conclusion 
of his studies: 
"The closer we get to 
consuming a whole foods, 
plant-based diet, 
the healthier we're going 
to be on all accounts."”
In France, journalist 
Fabrice Nicolino published 
a 400 page book titled, 
“The Meat Industry 
Threatens the World” 
that thoughtfully and 
meticulously evidenced 
the adverse effects 
factory farms have 
on the climate, 
human health 
and biodiversity. 
Le Monde 
is the French daily 
newspaper of record 
that is widely respected 
for its journalistic integrity. 
On October 13, 2009, 
Hervé Kempf published 
an article title, 
“And if Meat 
Was Assassinated?” 
on Le Monde 
regarding Mr. Nicolino’s 
persuasive book. 
“Pollution? 
By massive discharges 
of nitrogen, 
livestock farming causes 
invasions of green algae 
on many coasts. 
Soybean production 
in Latin America to 
provide food for animals, 
contributes to 
the degradation 
of the savannah 
and the Amazon. 
Deforestation is also 
directly linked to the desire 
to gain new lands
for cattle in Brazil. 
More surprisingly, 
the importance of 
greenhouse gas emissions 
by some 20 billion animals 
that we breed: 
according to 
an FAO report, 
“Livestock emits more 
greenhouse gas emissions 
than all global transport”. 
Health? 
The massive use 
of antibiotics 
as growth promoters 
has increased the resistance 
of many bacteria 
to antibiotics. 
Furthermore, 
it is increasingly clear 
that excessive consumption
of “factory” meat 
is a source of diseases. 
Moreover, as indicated 
by a report from the U.S. 
Department of Health, 
“because the highly 
concentrated breeding farms
tend to gather 
large groups of animals 
on a small piece of land, 
they facilitate the transfer 
and mixing of viruses”. 
Can this system last, 
given that it takes about 
seven from plants
to produce 
one calorie of meat? 
No, says the author. … 
If you want to feed 
nine billion people 
by 2050, 
it will be necessary 
to limit the numbers 
of animals raised. 
And... eat less meat.”
Forbes magazine, 
a popular 
US business magazine 
that is available worldwide 
and in 8 local language 
editions, recently 
published an article on 
the eco-friendly efforts 
of Professor 
Patrick O. Brown, PhD., 
a pioneering biochemist 
at the prestigious 
Stanford University. 
Dr. Brown, who has been 
a vegetarian for 30 years 
and a vegan for 5, 
is also a member 
of the National Academy 
of Sciences 
and an investigator 
for the Howard Hughes 
Medical Institute. 
In the article titled, 
“Drop That Burger,” 
published in 
Forbes magazine 
on November 30, 2009, 
Matthew Herper wrote: 
“He wants to put an end 
to animal farming, 
or at least 
put a significant dent 
in our global hunger for 
cows, pigs and chickens.
"There's absolutely 
no possibility 
that 50 years from now 
this system 
will be operating 
as it does now," 
says Brown. 
"One approach 
is to just wait, and 
either we'll deal with it 
or we'll be toast. 
I want to approach this 
as a solvable problem." 
Solution: 
"Eliminate animal farming 
on planet Earth."
Brown thinks 
if he can convince 
food manufacturers that 
the costs of selling meat 
are too high, and rising, 
they'll come around. 
Seemingly tiny changes 
in economics 
could make animal farming 
a lot less affordable. 
At the moment 
farmers around the world 
are arguing 
they should be immune 
from taxes and ceilings 
on greenhouse gases; 
if they are not exempt, 
the cost of meat will go up. 
Raising the price of water 
would have the same effect. 
It takes 
1,000 liters of water 
to produce a liter of milk.
"If you're a big
food producer now, 
this is absolutely 
inevitable," he says. 
"You'd better 
start thinking ahead. 
You'd better seriously 
start investing and trying 
to find alternatives 
in order to stay alive."”
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master 
Television. 
After these brief messages, 
we’ll continue our show 
highlighting mainstream 
media coverage 
on the sustainable, 
plant-based diet 
as a solution 
to global warming. 
Welcome back to our show 
featuring the increasing 
amount of press 
on the most effective, 
efficient, economical 
and ethical way 
to halt climate change – 
the veg lifestyle.   
This year, 
a significant increase 
in books 
with wide distribution 
have been published 
that examine the health, 
economics, ecology, 
and ethics 
of animal consumption. 
These include: 
“The Face on Your Plate,” 
by Dr. Jeffrey Moussaieff 
Masson, a vegan;
and “The Kind Diet,” 
by vegan actress 
Alicia Silverstone. 
Best selling American 
author and vegetarian 
Jonathan Safran Foer also 
wrote “Eating Animals,” 
a non-fiction work 
that exposes the cruelty 
behind factory farms, 
which led him to
raise his young children 
on a plant-based diet. 
This book has garnered 
much media attention 
from television 
to print mediums 
around the nation, 
with its truthful contents 
being presented 
for audiences 
to discern for themselves 
the morality 
in consuming animals. 
After reading 
“Eating Animals,” 
popular actress 
Natalie Portman, 
who had been 
a long time vegetarian, 
wrote on October 27, 
2009, an article titled, 
“Jonathan Safran Foer’s 
Eating Animals 
Turned Me Vegan,” 
for The Huffington Post, 
a highly influential 
and popular news blog:
“The human cost 
of factory farming -- both 
the compromised welfare 
of slaughterhouse workers 
and, even more, 
the environmental effects 
of the mass production 
of animals -- is staggering. 
Foer details 
the copious amounts 
of pig [excrement] 
sprayed into the air that 
result in great spikes in 
human respiratory ailments, 
the development 
of new bacterial strains 
due to overuse 
of antibiotics 
on farmed animals, 
and the origins of 
the swine flu epidemic, 
whose story 
has gripped the nation, 
in factory farms.
I read the chapter 
on animal [excrement] 
aloud to two friends – 
one is from Iowa 
and has asthma 
and the other is 
a North Carolinian 
who couldn't eat fish 
from her local river 
because animal waste 
had been dumped in it 
as described in the book. 
They had never 
truly thought about the 
connection between their 
environmental condition
and their food. 
The story of the 
mass farming of animals 
had more impact on them 
when they realized 
it had ruined 
their own backyards.
And as we use food 
to impart our beliefs 
to our children, the point 
from which Foer lifts off, 
what stories do we want 
to tell our children 
through their food?”
In New York Magazine, 
Sam Anderson also wrote 
of Mr. Foer’s 
compelling evidence 
for a vegetarian diet 
in his article titled, 
“Hungry? 
The Latest in 
a Bumper Crop of Books 
about the Ethics 
of Eating Animals” 
published on 
November 1, 2009.
“Foer’s depiction of 
the factory-farming system 
is brutal and thorough—
strong enough, I imagine, 
to win some converts. 
He describes genetically 
freakish animals, 
some of whom 
can’t walk or mate, 
living in tiny cages 
in windowless sheds, 
suffering ritual mutilation 
and sloppy slaughtering 
(many of them 
end up getting boiled 
or skinned alive). 
Unprofitable babies are 
immediately disposed of: 
electrocuted, 
thrown into a chipper, 
bashed headfirst 
into a concrete floor, or 
(in the case of irrelevant 
male dairy calves) 
sold to veal farmers. 
Slaughterhouse workers 
go crazy with sadism; 
toxic lakes of manure 
poison the environment. 
None of this is new, 
but, as Foer puts it, 
“we have the burden 
and the opportunity 
of living in the moment 
when the critique 
of factory farming 
broke into the
popular consciousness.” 
The sheer brutality 
of the system 
seems to have pushed our 
centuries-long stalemate 
to a tipping point: 
Factory farming has become 
its own most powerful 
counterargument. 
And that transcends 
all cutesiness. 
As Foer’s guide 
at the turkey farm 
tells him, “The truth is 
so powerful in this case 
it doesn’t even matter 
what your angle is.”” 
A recent 
government funded report 
in the United Kingdom, 
which was produced 
by the renowned 
medical journal, 
The Lancet, 
once again identifies 
the reduction of meat 
as a key component 
in human and 
environmental health. 
On November 25, 2009, 
Kate Devlin 
wrote of this report 
in an article titled, 
“Eat Less Meat to 
Reduce Climate Change 
and Save 
Thousands of Lives,” 
published on 
the daily newspaper, 
The Daily Telegraph, 
which is the UK’s 
most circulated newspaper 
of record.  
“People should 
eat less meat 
to reduce climate change 
and save 
thousands of lives a year, 
a Government-funded 
report has said. 
It was released 
as Andy Burnham, 
the Health Secretary, 
warned that 
global warming poses a 
“real and present danger” 
to the health of millions.
The number of animals 
farmed for food 
should be cut 
by almost a third, 
experts recommended.
The move would 
significantly cut emissions 
and save around 
18,000 lives a year 
from heart disease alone, 
they estimate. 
Meat production is 
estimated to be to blame 
for around 18 per cent 
of the gases 
thought to cause 
man-made global warming. 
Cutting down production 
of chicken, beef and pork 
could save 
even more lives,
scientists said, if deaths 
from other diseases, such 
as cancer and diabetes, 
are included. 
The move could also save 
around 200 deaths a year 
each from dementia 
and breast cancer.
Mr Burnham said: 
"Climate change 
can seem a distant, 
impersonal threat – 
in fact the 
associated costs to health 
are a very real 
and present danger.”
Margaret Chan, 
of the World Health 
Organisation,
warned that “no mercy” 
would be shown 
for humans’ mistakes 
over climate change.” 
Aside from 
the health aspects, 
meat production 
and consumption 
raises a multitude 
of ethical questions. 
US Professor 
James E. McWilliams 
of Texas State University 
and a fellow 
in agrarian studies 
at the prominent 
Yale University, 
addresses these issues 
in his article, 
“Bellying Up 
to Environmentalism,” 
published on 
November 16, 2009 
for The Washington Post, 
the largest and most 
established newspaper 
in the nation’s capital, 
Washington, D.C.
“Now, 
if someone told you that 
a particular corporation 
was trashing the air, 
water and soil; causing 
more global warming 
than the transportation 
industry; consuming 
massive amounts 
of fossil fuel; 
unleashing the cruelest 
sort of suffering
on innocent and 
sentient beings; 
failing to recycle its waste; 
and clogging our arteries 
in the process, 
how would you react? 
Would you say, 
"Hey, that's personal?" 
Probably not. 
It's more likely that 
you'd frame the matter 
as a dire political issue 
in need of 
a dire political response.
Vegetarianism 
is not only the most 
powerful political response 
we can make 
to industrialized food. 
It's a necessary prerequisite 
to reforming it. 
To quit eating meat 
is to dismantle 
the global food apparatus 
at its foundation. 
Sure, we've been 
inundated with ideas: 
eat local, 
vote with your fork, 
buy organic, 
support fair trade, etc. 
But these proposals 
all lack something 
that every successful 
environmental movement 
has always placed at 
its core: genuine sacrifice. 
Until we make that leap, 
until we create 
a culinary culture 
in which the meat-eaters 
must do the apologizing, 
the current proposals 
will be nothing 
more than gestures 
that turn the fork 
into an empty symbol 
rather than a real tool for 
environmental change.” 
With the planet’s survival 
at stake, it is now 
ever more pertinent 
that the message of veg 
as a viable and 
sustainable solution 
to climate change 
be spread throughout 
the world’s population. 
Through the help 
of mainstream media 
this message can reach 
the public at large 
most effectively, 
helping to raise awareness 
for that day when, 
as with other 
harmful substances, 
meat consumption becomes 
socially unacceptable.
With its capability to 
reduce greenhouse gases 
by as much as 80 percent, 
let us pray 
all world leaders
at the UN Copenhagen 
Climate Conference 
seriously regards adopting 
the sustainable policy 
of a vegan diet. 
Our respectful gratitude, 
all journalists and media 
for your concerted 
and noble efforts 
in promulgating 
the urgent message 
to be veg as the key for 
the salvation of humanity 
and our shared planet.  
Gracious viewers, 
thank you 
for your presence 
for today’s program. 
Up next is 
Words of Wisdom 
right after 
Noteworthy News 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
Blessed be 
all dedicated hearts 
in bringing about 
a sustainable 
and peaceful world.