Today’s Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants 
will be presented 
in Spanish, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
French, German, 
Indonesian, Japanese, 
Korean, Malay, 
Persian, Portuguese, 
Russian, Thai 
and Spanish.
Greetings, friendly viewers 
and welcome to 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants.
Featuring ever-stretching 
sandy beaches 
and azure seas, 
the peaceful country 
of Costa Rica 
in Central America 
is blessed with 
a rich variety 
of flora and fauna. 
In 2007, the Costa Rican 
government announced 
their strong commitment 
to become 
a carbon neutral country 
by 2021. 
According to 
the Happy Planet Index, 
Costa Rica is 
the greenest country 
in the world.
Mr. Carlos Huertas, 
a Costa Rican farmer, 
is a leader and role model 
who is supporting 
his nation’s wonderful 
environmental initiative 
by running a sustainable 
organic vegetable farm 
that once was a dairy. 
Today’s program features 
the inspirational story 
of Mr. Carlos Huertas 
and his Verdegal 
Organic Vegetable Farm 
located in the town
of Palmira de Zarcero, 
Costa Rica.
I came from 
a dairy farming family. 
Since I was a little boy, 
I have been 
milking the cows. 
Later on, my dad gave us 
our own plot to cultivate 
when we got married, 
so I started 
to make the dairy bigger, 
making a kind of feedlot. 
For many years 
the Huertas family 
had made a living 
by selling milk 
from their dairy farm, 
with 5.5 hectares 
of farmland devoted to 
dairy production. 
What sparked Mr. Huertas 
to end his involvement 
in animal husbandry? 
I had 40 cows 
in the feedlot. 
Then I was offered a 
whole herd from a dairy 
that was going to be 
closed down. 
We made a deal and 
we introduced the cows 
into our feedlot and 
about three years later, 
we realized that 
the bull and all the cows 
from that herd were 
infected with brucellosis. 
Since the bull was infected, 
all the cows also 
became infected.
On a typical dairy farm, 
cows are crammed 
in tight warehouses 
and injected with 
bovine growth hormones 
so they will produce 
10 times more milk 
than they would 
normally give.
Having to experience 
prolonged suffering both 
mentally and physically, 
the immune systems of
dairy cows are weakened 
and they frequently 
become infected 
with diseases. 
The milk from a cow 
infected with brucellosis, 
mustn’t be drunk, 
because the milk
passes the brucellosis 
to humans. 
Brucellosis, also known 
as Bang’s disease 
or undulant fever, 
is a highly contagious 
zoonotic illness 
that can pass 
from animal to animal 
in densely packed 
factory farms 
or from animal to human 
through the consumption 
of unpasteurized milk, 
cheeses or 
any dairy products 
made from the milk 
of infected animals. 
Those who become ill 
with brucellosis 
may experience fever, 
sweating, weakness, 
anemia, headaches, 
depression and muscular 
and bodily pain. 
The duration 
of these symptoms can
last for weeks, months 
or even become chronic.
Another reason 
why humans should not 
drink cow’s milk 
is because of a condition 
called mastitis, 
a painful udder infection. 
When the cow is milked, 
pus contaminates the milk. 
This pus may have 
paratuberculosis bacteria 
which have been linked 
to Crohn’s disease, 
a condition causing the 
chronic inflammation of 
the human digestive tract. 
In addition, large doses
of antibiotics are given
to infected cows and
these pharmaceuticals 
become present 
in milk products.  
This excessive use 
of antibiotics gives rise 
to drug-resistant bacteria. 
It thus makes it 
ever more difficult to 
find an effective antibiotic 
for treatment 
if people are infected 
by these same bacteria. 
When there are problems 
with mastitis, 
and when there is 
any illness in cows, 
antibiotics are usually used. 
With his concern for 
the health of the animals 
and humans, 
Mr. Huertas closed down 
the dairy farm. 
Shogo Sasaki, 
a Japanese volunteer 
at his farm, taught him 
how to cultivate 
organic crops. 
The old barn, 
we transformed it 
into the fertilizer room; 
the old milking room 
became a packaging room.
Here, we can see a system 
we invented, which is 
a very expensive system, 
but at the same time 
it is very efficient 
for production; 
it is a beet crop. 
We produce baby carrots, 
peppers, spinach, beets, 
cabbages. 
Some other crops 
which we are starting on 
include strawberries.  
Realizing his 
organic farming business 
benefitted 
the environment,
Mr. Huertas began asking 
other farmers 
to adopt similar 
sustainable methods.
To encourage more of them 
to make the noble switch, 
Mr. Huertas believes 
that it will take a 
cooperative effort between 
farmers, consumers 
and the government. 
If the consumer asks for 
more organic products, 
that is the best incentive 
for farmers 
to also try to change 
to organic farming. 
In fact, 
we don´t have the power; 
it is the consumer who does.
I think 
that one of the incentives 
to move away 
from dairy farms 
could be subsidies 
from the government 
for these people to produce 
soya, corn,  beans and rice.
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants 
will return 
after these brief messages 
with more about the 
kindly Mr. Carlos Huertas 
of Costa Rica. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
It was a dairy farm 
20 years ago and we 
have made the transition 
into organic agriculture 
since then.
And initiatives like this 
should be taken 
around the world. 
Our motto is: 
“If the present is not green, 
there will not be 
any future.” 
Welcome back to 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants. 
Today’s program features 
Mr. Carlos Huertas 
of Costa Rica, 
a former dairy farmer 
who has taken 
the eco-wise initiative 
to transform his dairy 
into the life-sustaining 
Verdegal Organic 
Vegetable Farm. 
As consumers, 
what we decide to buy 
speaks volumes 
to businesses. 
Therefore, 
if everyone were to adopt 
an organic vegan lifestyle, 
this would show those 
in the animal products 
industry that we truly 
care about our health, 
animal welfare and 
our environment and that 
we only want to consume 
compassionate foods. 
If the consumer says: 
“I don´t want meat, 
I don´t want milk,” 
then there will not be 
milk farmers 
nor meat factories. 
If there is awareness 
and knowledge 
and we help people 
and consumers 
to realize these problems, 
then the answer 
will come out of that. 
In fact, they themselves 
are the ones 
who have the answer 
in their hands. 
If one buys milk or meat, 
one is contributing 
to the destruction 
of the planet.
Xinia Durán, 
a vegetarian, has worked
at the Verdegal 
Organic Vegetable Farm 
for five years and 
shares the same vision 
to safeguard our 
precious Earthly home.
It has been 
a very nice experience, 
very good for me 
as a woman because 
I have been able to learn 
and discover that 
you can make good things 
to change the world 
from your workplace. 
The world won´t be 
changed tomorrow, 
the world is being changed 
today with the positive 
things you can do, 
starting in the morning 
when you get up 
thanking God, 
and trying to make sure 
everything that comes to us 
is positive. 
I know that whatever 
I am working with, 
another person 
is going to eat it. 
So I have to work with
good energy, willingly, 
with positive feeling, 
and believe in 
what I am doing 
so the other person, 
upon buying the product 
that I am working on, 
can eat it and 
have it sit well with him. 
Since she was young, 
Ms. Durán 
has been a vegetarian and 
she encourages children 
to halt meat consumption 
to protect their health.
I was very small, 
but I didn´t like 
the flavor of milk, 
it was unpleasant. 
Then I was choosing more 
cabbage and potatoes; 
I love puree, and 
since then I decided to 
consume only vegetables.
Children should learn to 
stop eating all that meat, 
all those sausages, 
because they are terrible, 
(and) all those fats, 
(and) fast foods. 
It is better to choose 
a lot of vegetables, 
plenty of salads, 
and fresh juices.
Before buying anything 
in any supermarket, 
pay attention to 
the certification. 
It is very important. 
It guarantees that 
the product is suitable
for you to eat, 
without chemicals.
Let us now 
take a closer look at the 
produce from Verdegal 
Organic Vegetable Farm, 
a truly successful 
green business. 
We have beets, carrots, 
potatoes, cabbage, 
purple cabbage, 
and strawberries…
This one is the beet.  
Here they are processed. 
Size may really matter 
to one market 
but for another, 
size may not matter 
as much as quality.
This is what we can find 
in the supermarket, 
ready to eat. 
It is already disinfected 
and it is certified, 
proving that it is organic.
These are strawberries; 
strawberries 
with a very good size, 
and a delicious flavor. 
They are super sweet and 
are organic strawberries 
produced here 
in El Verdegal.
This beet is also 
produced on the farm; 
it is organic. 
It is energizing, 
and for people who 
suffer from constipation, 
it is a natural laxative. 
It is very good because it 
doesn´t hurt your stomach, 
it sits very well with you. 
If you drink 
some beet juice, 
with a juice extractor, 
in the morning 
on empty stomach, 
you will get your blood 
cleaned, purified. 
Mr. Huertas shares 
some insights on the trends 
in organic agriculture 
in his area.
Thanks to God, and 
we feel very happy that, 
some producers 
have been pioneers in 
this (organic agriculture), 
so the production 
of this region is very clean 
compared to 
10 or 15 years ago. 
Then the transition into 
clean and healthy farming, 
is within reach of
any producer 
at this moment. 
The only thing needed 
is the will to do it.
We salute you, 
Mr. Huertas, Ms. Durán 
and all farmers 
in Costa Rica 
and across the world 
making the bold 
and heroic switch 
from animal farming to 
organic vegan agriculture. 
Your life-saving and 
planet-sustaining 
decision truly helps 
to save countless 
animal lives,
betters public health and 
preserves our environment. 
Be Veg, 
Go Green, 
Save the Planet. 
Wise viewers, thank you 
for joining us today for 
Animal World: 
Our Co-Inhabitants 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening 
Entertainment, 
after Noteworthy News. 
May truth and virtue be 
the hallmarks of our world.