I had promised myself 
I’d do everything I could 
to have this river cleaned up. 
I was hoping I could 
get this river cleaned up 
before I die. 
I was hoping, until I 
heard about the pig farm. 
And when I heard about 
the pig farm I said, 
“No way! It’s impossible, 
they won’t let it happen. 
They can’t do that.” 
And they did. 
Hallo, caring viewers, 
and welcome to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today’s episode 
focuses on the 
enormous environmental, 
socio-economic 
and public health costs 
caused by 
a commercial pig farm 
located in Quebec, Canada.
Animal agriculture has 
a severely negative effect 
on the air, water, and 
land and all life that lives 
within these three realms. 
The livestock industry 
uses 70% of 
all agricultural lands 
globally and nearly a third 
of the ice-free terrestrial 
surface of the planet.  
Virgin rainforests 
are felled to make way 
for pastures which soon 
become permanently bare 
from cattle grazing. 
Factory farms generate 
enormous quantities 
of hazardous manure 
and other organic matter 
that are filled with 
pathogens and 
antibiotic residues 
that seep into rivers, 
lakes and seas.
Livestock waste 
fouls the air 
with huge amounts 
of greenhouse gases. 
According to the paper 
“Livestock and 
Climate Change” 
published in 
World Watch Magazine 
and written by 
former and current 
environmental experts 
from the World Bank, 
Robert Goodland 
and Jeff Anhang, 
the livestock sector 
is responsible 
for more than 51% of 
all human-caused global 
greenhouse gas emissions.
The industry also 
accounts for the release 
of 37% of all 
human-caused emissions 
of the highly dangerous 
greenhouse gas methane.
Ms. Johanne Dion 
and her husband 
Tim Yeatman live in 
the small town of Richelieu 
which is located 
by the Richelieu River 
in Quebec. 
A factory farm 
housing 5,800 pigs 
was built in their area 
and life has now become 
truly nightmarish 
for the couple 
and the beauty of the land 
has eroded away. 
We now present excerpts 
from interviews 
with Ms. Dion 
and Mr. Yeatman 
about the many ways 
this pig operation 
is seriously affecting 
their lives and those of 
others in their community.
You see the Richelieu River 
just in front 100 meters 
away from these farms 
and the water intake 
for three cities 
is just about four 
or five kilometers away 
and all the slurry 
that's been spread around 
is washed away 
by the rain into the river. 
I moved around 
the province of Quebec 
a lot in my career 
with IBM of 34 years, 
which enabled me 
to swim in a lot of rivers. 
People are trying 
to harness the rivers, and 
use them as sewage dumps 
for piggeries. 
When I met Johanne, 
this Richelieu River 
in probably 1984; I think 
it was still swimmable. 
It’s not swimmable anymore. 
Now we are surrounded 
by at least four different 
pig farms.
I was aware about 
the year 2000 that the 
government was pushing 
big pig farms, actually. 
Pork production was 
the main topic 
in the agricultural sector 
around here. 
I was aware of the problems 
that this brought to 
the people living around 
these pig facilities. 
I saw in the local newspaper 
on the front page 
that we would have 
a 5,800-pig farm up river 
from here. 
I couldn’t believe it. 
I was shocked. 
For the past 15 years, 
I have been working 
to get the Richelieu River 
cleaned up 
because it was getting 
more and more polluted. 
And I want to work on that. 
My ultimate goal 
was to be able to 
swim in the river again 
before I died.
Pigs generate three times 
more waste than humans do. 
For those pigs 
raised in factory farms, 
their manure contains 
viruses, parasites, 
hormones, ammonia, 
heavy metals, 
and antibiotic-resistant 
bacteria.
The slurry’s been spread 
all over the place and 
the fields are now drained. 
All the streams 
have been straightened out. 
So, every time it rains, 
the river changes 
its color completely. 
At the bottom of the river, 
there is this slimy stuff 
that makes it 
absolutely disgusting.
Municipal sewage 
is treated. 
The industrial effluents 
are treated. 
But farmers can 
go right ahead and 
spread untreated sewage, 
untreated manure 
on fields that are 
so efficiently drained that 
everything goes straight, 
either into streams, 
or seeps into the ground, 
and contaminates 
underground water. 
All the arguments are there. 
In 1995, a one hectare 
manure lagoon 
in North Carolina, USA 
burst, releasing 
97.6- million liters 
of sewage 
into the New River. 
The event was the largest 
environmental spill 
in US history, more than 
twice as large as 
the Exxon Valdez oil spill 
in 1989. 
Consequently millions 
of fish perished 
along with all other beings 
living in the river.
The two manure pits 
that contain 
millions and millions 
of liters of pigs’ slurry. 
They are made out of 
reinforced concrete. 
And they are built on clay. 
In our climate, 
clay freezes and thaws, 
moves up and down. 
Even our basements crack 
and concrete cracks 
eventually. 
In the long-term, 
there could be 
a catastrophic spill. 
There could be an accident 
that could severely 
impede the water quality 
of the Richelieu River 
and our water intake 
for our water.
After these brief messages, 
we’ll return with more 
from our interviews 
with Mr. Yeatman 
and Ms. Dion concerning 
commercial pig farming 
in Richelieu, Canada. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
My life 
has completely changed 
in the past 30 years. 
It’s gone from paradise 
to polluted mayhem.
Welcome back to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
Our program today examines 
how a pig factory farm 
in Richelieu, 
Quebec, Canada 
releasing huge amounts 
of toxins and pollutants 
into the environment is
impacting local residents. 
Six kilometers away 
you can smell it terribly 
sometimes. 
One day last summer 
I went into town, 
and standing in 
the Ikea parking lot.
I was having trouble 
breathing because of 
the disgusting smell, 
not because it was 
physically bothering me, 
it was mentally bothering me. 
And when we’re 
a kilometer and a half 
from the other side 
of the farm from town, 
sometimes 
it is really disgusting. 
We like to drive out 
in the country around here 
on a motorbike. 
Sometimes in the fall 
when they’re emptying out 
their reservoirs 
of liquid pig manure, 
you can’t even breathe 
for probably 
two or three minutes.
When Ms. Dion is at home, 
how long a period of time 
does she typically have to 
endure the appalling smell 
of the manure?
For hours a day. 
It depends 
on the wind direction, it 
depends on the humidity 
and the climatic conditions, 
and it depends if they’re 
cleaning up the barn or not, 
it depends if they’re 
spreading or not, it 
depends on the heat also, 
the hotter it is the more 
they have to turn up the fans 
to evacuate the air 
from the barns. 
So of course that 
spreads the smell around 
pretty good. 
So, it’s punctual 
but I can tell you that 
I’ve smelled pig in March 
and they’re been 
spreading in October 
and in November, 
even if the law says 
they’re not allowed 
to spread after October 1, 
they can have 
special permission 
and they do it anyways.
According to research 
done in the United States, 
a concentrated 
animal feeding operation 
can decrease the value 
of neighboring homes 
by up to 40%.
A lot of people will tell you 
what we hate 
about pig farms 
is the smell. 
That bothers a lot of people. 
It bothers them that 
their house is devalued. 
They try to sell it. 
Some have been able to, 
but some haven’t. 
And some moved out 
when they heard 
about this pig farm. 
They just moved out, 
selling their houses or not, 
they just left.
What are some 
of the physical and 
psychological issues that 
those living in the vicinity 
of a pig farm experience? 
About the people 
being sick around here, 
when there was 
spreading (manure) with 
guns spraying in the air, 
I noticed 
that within 48 hours 
I would have diarrhea. 
That I noticed.
We personally know 
one person, 
who lives very near 
to that pig farm. 
Some of their fields are 
in their back yard, and 
they have a stream running 
right by their property. 
Every time 
after either a heavy rain 
or after they spread 
their liquid manure 
onto the fields, 
she gets deathly ill 
and has to 
go on those respirators.
 
A lot of people have 
stress-associated problems 
because of 
the pig farms – allergies,
thyroid problems, 
high blood pressure 
(and) depression. 
Pig manure emits 
over 168 kinds of gases, 
including ammonia and 
the hazardous greenhouse 
gases hydrogen sulfide 
and methane.
University of Iowa, USA 
researchers have found 
that children 
who attend schools 
near factory farms 
may be at higher risk 
of having asthma.
We have another friend 
who does not live 
in the area anymore, 
but her back yard 
was backing on the fields 
that were being sprayed 
on that farm. 
Her baby was born 
asthmatic.
We can’t necessarily 
attribute that to the farm, 
but we can tell you 
that her second oldest 
is also asthmatic. 
She has three children and 
two of the three children 
are asthmatic. 
And they’re not old kids. 
The oldest is seven, and 
the youngest is now three.
Another neighbor,
who wished to 
remain anonymous, 
described to us
how his family had been 
affected by the unbearably 
suffocating stench 
emanating by the rotting 
pig carcasses and feces. 
We cannot breathe. 
It’s the ammonia. 
We lack air. 
There have been days 
when we had to leave. 
We leave in the morning, 
we return in the evening 
when the winds have 
changed direction.
An estimated 70% of 
antibiotics used in the US 
are administered to cattle 
to speed growth and 
to ensure they survive 
the horrendously filthy, 
disease-laden conditions 
in which 
they are made to live.
The widespread abuse 
of these drugs 
by the livestock industry 
has led to 
the rapid evolution 
of antibiotic-resistant 
bacteria or “super bugs.”
They are fed antibiotics, 
minimum doses in their feed. 
But they are still fed on 
antibiotics to be able to 
gain weight faster 
and we wonder 
why our antibiotics are 
not working anymore. 
They are in our meat. 
Very questionable practices. 
Pig farms are 
breeding grounds for MRSA 
(Methicillin Resistant 
Staphylococcus Aureus) 
and super bugs that are 
antibiotic resistant. 
We’re always 
afraid of catching 
antibiotic- resistance bugs 
like MRSA and staph 
and strep.
We thank Johanne Dion, 
Tim Yeatman
and other residents 
of Richelieu, Quebec 
for speaking to us 
about their experiences of 
living near a factory farm 
including sharing 
how the massive amounts 
of pollution generated 
from this operation 
is causing 
tremendous physical 
and emotional suffering. 
Please join us again 
next Wednesday 
on Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
for Part 2 of our program 
on pig farming’s effects 
on the town of Richelieu. 
Treasured viewers 
thank you for 
your noble company 
today on Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
after Noteworthy News. 
May we all soon choose 
the safe and nutritious 
organic vegan diet so that 
the livestock industry 
ends forever.
Hallo, esteemed viewers, 
and welcome to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Today’s episode is 
Part 2 of our program
focusing on the 
enormous environmental, 
socio-economic 
and public health costs 
caused by 
a commercial pig farm 
located in Quebec, Canada.
Animal agriculture has 
a severely negative effect 
on the air, water, and 
land and all life that lives 
within these three realms. 
The livestock industry 
uses 70% of 
all agricultural lands 
globally and nearly a third 
of the ice-free terrestrial 
surface of the planet.  
Virgin rainforests 
are felled to make way 
for pastures which soon 
become permanently bare 
from cattle grazing. 
Factory farms generate 
enormous quantities 
of hazardous manure 
and other organic matter 
that are filled with 
pathogens and 
antibiotic residues 
that seep into rivers, 
lakes and seas.
Livestock waste 
fouls the air 
with huge amounts 
of greenhouse gases. 
According to the paper 
“Livestock and 
Climate Change” 
published in 
World Watch Magazine 
and written by 
former and current 
environmental experts 
from the World Bank, 
Robert Goodland 
and Jeff Anhang, 
the livestock sector 
is responsible 
for more than 51% of 
all human-caused global 
greenhouse gas emissions.
The industry also 
accounts for the release 
of 37% of all 
human-caused emissions 
of the highly dangerous 
greenhouse gas methane. 
Ms. Johanne Dion 
and her husband 
Tim Yeatman live in 
the small town of Richelieu 
which is located 
by the Richelieu River 
in Quebec. 
A factory farm 
housing 5,800 pigs 
was built in their area 
and life has now become 
truly nightmarish 
for the couple 
and the beauty of the land 
has eroded away. 
We now present 
further excerpts 
from interviews 
with Ms. Dion 
and Mr. Yeatman 
about the many ways 
this pig operation 
is seriously affecting 
their lives and those of 
others in their community.
I was born here 
in Richelieu. 
My parents came 
from Montreal (Canada) 
when they got married. 
They loved the river. 
They loved having the 
countryside in the back. 
We had orchards, 
and cows in the fields, 
and all kinds of 
vegetables and fruits 
in the backyard. 
Across the road 
we have a river and 
I’ve spent all my life here 
by the Richelieu River. 
In the summertime, 
it attracts a lot of people. 
They come and swim 
in the river even though 
it’s polluted now. 
People don’t know 
and especially 
if we have a dry spell, 
the water gets clear and 
some city folks still swim 
in the river. 
It attracts a lot of people. 
A lot of people walk by 
here, especially when 
the sun is out like today, 
and admire the view 
and the birds. 
It’s very nice around here.
So you love your town 
very much? 
Yes, my river 
is very important to me. 
Swimming 
when I was a child 
was the thing 
I loved the most doing. 
I spent a lot of time 
by the river 
and nature also 
is very important to me. 
I have a garden here 
around the house. 
As you can see 
I am surrounded by 
the plants in my house. 
So nature, plants, 
everything around me 
is very important to me. 
My environment 
is important for me.
There are a total of 
four pig farms 
within the region 
surrounding Richelieu. 
The foul odors 
caused by the farms 
are so strong that 
people moving to the area 
may decide where to reside 
based on the intensity 
of the smell 
they are willing to live with.
Quebec is the largest 
pig producer in Canada. 
And Canada is 
the largest pig producing 
per capita country 
in the world. 
So Quebec has 
lot of smelly places. 
And people decided 
that they were going to 
start businesses 
to try to make money 
off the smells. 
They made a map 
which showed, according to 
different wind directions 
and velocities, what parts 
of the neighborhood 
would be exposed 
to different smells. 
When the wind is 
to the south 
coming down the river 
towards the north, 
because this river 
runs south- north 
from Lake Champlain, 
the smell will come 
from the farms 
which are basically 
on the Richelieu River, 
south of us, and 
come up the river, because 
it’s an open water space. 
And they just get blown 
right by the house here 
and you can smell it 
like crazy.
According to a 2005 study 
on terrestrial eco-regions 
by the World Wildlife 
Fund (WWF), 
some 306 of Earth’s 
825 known regions 
are facing threats 
from livestock production. 
Another analysis 
of the 35 global hotspots 
for biodiversity 
done by Conservation 
International 
reveals that 23 are 
now seriously affected 
by livestock production. 
What surrounds 
the pig farms, are BT 
(Bacillus thuringiensis) corn. 
Practically the only crop 
that can grow in fields 
where pig’s manure 
has been spread 
is mostly BT corn. 
So we’re surrounded by 
genetically modified corn. 
I’ve seen butterfly 
populations go down. 
I’ve seen bird
populations go down. 
I’ve seen summers 
when I didn’t see 
any honey bees at all. 
I’ve seen other summers 
that I haven’t seen 
any bumble bees at all. 
Some summers 
I can see a few. 
They come back a bit. 
But like last summer, 
I didn’t see 
any monarch butterflies 
enter migration at all.
After these brief messages, 
we will hear more 
about the severe damage 
caused by 
intensive animal farming 
in Richelieu, Canada. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home 
on Supreme Master 
Television. 
Our program today 
focuses on people who 
live within the vicinity 
of a concentrated 
animal feeding operation 
and are suffering because 
of the tremendous 
environmental devastation 
caused by this facility. 
As an example, coliforms, 
a type of bacteria 
present in the feces 
of humans and mammals 
that make water 
undrinkable, 
has been found throughout 
the community’s 
water bodies and wells.
Most noticeably, 
the local river has been 
severely fouled due to the 
presence of the pig farm. 
A summer camp 
in the area for children 
no longer lets participants 
near the Richelieu River.
  
They used to bring them 
during the summertime, 
during the daytime. 
The parents have
been opposed to that 
because they’re afraid 
that the river’s too polluted 
and that the kids can 
catch infections by playing 
in the dirty river bottom. 
So that stopped. 
And of course, 
I deplore the fact 
that a lot of children now 
have all kind of allergies 
and asthma, something 
that I never suffered of. 
Is it the environment? 
Is it the pollution? 
You have to wonder.
The coliform in the river 
here after a rainfall, 
it goes way beyond 
what’s acceptable 
for swimming. 
Don’t even think about 
drinking it; forget it. 
It’s much too dangerous. 
But even touching it 
you risk catching 
a bad bug definitely, 
because the coliform count 
is so high, and that’s not 
counting the pathogens 
and the herbicides and 
the pesticides, 
and God knows what else. 
I’m at least 
fourteen kilometers 
downstream 
from the pig farm. 
But still after a rainfall 
I can tell you that 
the coliform count here 
goes way up; 
it shoots way up. 
Health Canada, 
the nation’s 
public health department, 
after studying cattle density 
in the rural areas of 
the province of Ontario 
in 2000 concluded 
that those communities 
with the highest 
concentrations of livestock 
had the highest rates 
of E. coli infection 
from 1990 to 1995. 
In Richelieu, 
the drinking water supply 
which was 
once sweet and pure 
is now contaminated 
due to the massive amounts 
of manure generated 
by the factory farm.
In the neighborhood 
that you know of, 
does anybody have wells 
that are contaminated?
Yes. 
Can you tell us some more?
 
Well we didn’t test 
his well, okay. 
But his neighbor tested it, 
and did determine that 
they had not just coliform 
in their well; they had 
E. coli in their well. 
What does it mean?
 
E. coli is what can kill you; 
coliform just 
gives you diarrhea. 
The manure is spread 
on the fields 
using an aerial spray 
and then pollutes 
the region’s water as 
it washes into the streams 
and rivers and seeps 
into the water table 
following rainfalls.  
Ms. Dion believes 
that the act 
of spraying the waste 
into the air 
also sickens people 
as the wind disperses 
the disease-laden matter 
everywhere.
I must admit 
that I have much more 
frequent diarrhea 
in the spring time or 
when the water is dirty, 
when the river water 
gets brown. 
If I drink too much water 
out of the faucet, 
there's a good chance 
I have a diarrhea 
the next day. 
I went to the annual 
Public Health Day 
and I saw a study 
about people getting sick, 
getting diarrhea, because 
of living near either 
pig farms or cattle farms. 
Years ago, Johanne Dion 
and Tim Yeatman helped 
to create a group seeking 
to prevent the opening 
of the nearby pig farm. 
We formed a citizen’s group. 
We were 
600 paid members. 
We did everything 
we could to stop it. 
I mean we petitioned. 
We had a petition going. 
We got a lot of attention 
from the media. 
We were in newspapers 
and on television. 
Though unsuccessful 
in halting the opening 
of the factory farm, 
today Ms. Dion 
and Mr. Yeatman
work hard to try and
lessen the disastrous 
environmental consequences 
of its operation 
and strongly advocate 
for its closure.
I don’t see any changes 
being done and 
I am still working at it. 
I am joining all kinds of 
committees hoping 
to have people realize 
that it’s important 
that we keep 
our waterways clean.
Already we’re 
depending on this river 
to have water to drink 
and it would be nice 
to swim in it again.
My husband called 
Radio Canada 
on a talk show and said 
that farmers should be 
inspected more 
and their pollution 
should be checked more 
by our government.
In conclusion, 
Johanne Dion sincerely 
calls upon each of us to 
avoid making purchases 
that support factory farming.
It’s very hard 
to make people realized 
that you can change things 
by what you buy when 
you go to the grocery store. 
You can change things 
by saying, “I want 
this river cleaned up. 
I want to be able to swim 
in this river.” 
Changing to 
an organic vegan diet 
is the simplest 
and quickest way 
to stop global warming 
and intensive 
animal agriculture 
and is something that 
we all can do very easily. 
We thank Johanne Dion 
and Tim Yeatman and 
the other brave residents 
of Richelieu, Quebec 
for speaking out 
on the dangers the pig farm 
poses to their community.  
May all factory farming 
soon end so that our planet 
can be in balance 
once again 
and animals and humans 
can live in tranquility.
Caring viewers, thank you 
for your noble company 
on today’s episode of 
Planet Earth: 
Our Loving Home. 
Coming up next is 
Enlightening Entertainment 
following 
Noteworthy News.
May the light and love 
of Heaven 
always be our guide.