I became a vegetarian 
in 1950, while I was a 
student at the University 
of Iowa (USA). 
And then when I finally 
got around to completing 
my internship at 
San Diego County Hospital, 
I realized that in order to 
get milk out of a cow
you have to keep her 
pregnant. 
And I hadn’t realized that, 
and I didn’t realize that 
there’s a huge amount 
of suffering involved 
in the dairy industry,
so I became a vegan. 
Hallo, 
compassionate viewers, 
and welcome to 
another edition of 
Healthy Living featuring 
Dr. William Harris 
a now retired respected 
US physician, 
a board member of 
the Vegetarian Society of 
Hawaii and 
a long-time promoter 
of the vegan lifestyle. 
Today he will share 
his insights 
on diet and health.
For decades, Dr. Harris 
has been deeply concerned 
about the issue of dietary 
choices and their effect 
on well-being and 
has conducted extensive 
research on the subject. 
In 1996, he launched 
the Kaiser Permanente 
Vegetarian Lifestyle 
Clinic in Hawaii, USA, 
where clients learned 
about the benefits of 
the plant-based diet 
including how 
it prevents disease.  
The last couple of years 
as a physician 
for Kaiser (Hospital), 
I ran a volunteer Kaiser 
Permanente Vegetarian 
Lifestyle Clinic, and 
the idea was to take
a few patients who were 
willing to listen and try to 
make changes and 
teach them how to be 
successful vegetarians, 
and by doing that, 
getting off many of 
their medications. 
I didn’t actually 
get any real support. 
This was a volunteer effort. 
I initiated it back in 1996 
and I ran it myself, but 
I think some of it must 
have rubbed off, because 
it is true that they’re now
trying to prevent disease 
rather than trying to 
treat it after it’s arrived, 
which is the only sensible 
thing to do, really. 
In 1998, desiring to 
spread the word 
regarding the hazards of 
animal agriculture, 
Dr. Harris published 
“The Scientific Basis of 
Vegetarianism” and 
sent the book to 
every member of the US 
Congress to inform them 
of the harmful impacts 
of providing 
federal subsidies for 
livestock raising and that 
government support 
for fruit and vegetable 
production is 
a constructive way to 
improve public health. 
We are the long-term 
descendents of large 
arboreal primates. 
Our ancestors, 
if you go back three or 
four million years ago, 
were living in the upper 
branches of trees. 
And they were eating 
what was available 
up in those trees, which
was leaves and fruit. 
They didn’t have to 
be eating meat 
in order to be healthy. 
And they certainly 
weren’t drinking 
cow’s milk, because 
cows don’t live in trees. 
The dangers of 
consuming meat, eggs 
and dairy products are 
being confirmed by 
more and more scientific 
research every day. 
The connection is 
becoming increasingly 
clear that all animal food 
contributes to most of 
the degenerative diseases 
of our time: cancer, 
heart disease, diabetes,  
certainly type two diabetes, 
and probably a whole 
bunch of esoteric diseases 
that are so unusual 
that they are known 
by hyphenated names. 
Dr. Harris now addresses 
the myth that humans need 
to eat meat for protein.
Protein is a co-polymer 
of amino acids, which 
means it’s a long string 
of amino acids 
hung together 
by chemical bonds, and 
all of the essential amino 
acids, the ones that you 
have to have in your diet, 
are synthesized only 
by plants and 
microorganisms. 
So when a doctor tells 
his patient that he’s got 
to eat meat in order to 
get over thus and such 
disease, I see it only 
as a misinformed doctor. 
When you feed the meat 
protein to a human, 
the first thing they do is 
break down the protein to 
the amino acids 
of which it’s made. 
And the amino acids 
are identical, whether 
they came from a plant 
or from an animal. 
There’s absolutely 
no difference.
Vitamin A is important 
to maintaining healthy 
eyesight, skin, teeth, 
and mucous membranes. 
Vitamin D is essential to 
keeping our bones strong, 
as it helps us absorb 
calcium. 
Both are easy-to-obtain 
nutrients for those 
following a vegan diet.  
Vitamin A is 
an essential metabolite. 
That means you have to 
have it in your body. 
But you can make it 
from beta-carotene, and
if you have enough leafy, 
green vegetables and 
carrots and things like that,
pigmented vegetables 
generally have 
the carotenoids. 
Vitamin D, the best way 
to get it is from the Sun. 
And just a little bit of 
exposure to the Sun 
in sub-Arctic latitudes is 
enough to give you all the 
vitamin D that you need. 
If you’re afraid 
you won’t get enough, 
a vegan source of 
vitamin D is mushrooms. 
You turn the mushrooms 
gill side up and 
hang them out in the Sun 
for a while, and they 
develop the so-called 
vitamin D, which is 
actually ergosterol. 
And from that you can 
make the hormone 
that you need, which is 
misclassified as vitamin D.
Dr. Harris wishes that 
all vegans pay special 
attention to ensuring their 
diets include sufficient 
amounts of vitamin B12. 
One vitamin that is an 
absolute must for vegans 
is vitamin B12. 
You have to have this 
vitamin as a supplement. 
You can’t get B12 from 
higher plant foods. 
You won’t find it 
in spinach or in rice
or grain. 
It’s made by bacteria of 
a couple of species. 
And it’s an extraordinarily 
complicated, 
complicated molecule. 
It has the highest 
molecular weight of 
any of the vitamins, and 
it has a very complicated 
transport mechanism. 
And so you do have to 
have the stuff, and 
you have to add that 
to your vegan diet. 
When we return, 
Dr. Harris will continue 
to discuss how to 
supplement one’s diet 
with vitamin B12, and 
presents more practical 
suggestions on 
choosing nutritious foods. 
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
Healthy Living 
here on 
Supreme Master Television 
where we’re talking 
with Dr. William Harris 
a now retired respected 
US physician, 
a board member of 
the Vegetarian Society 
of Hawaii and 
a long-time promoter of 
the plant-based lifestyle. 
A vegan since 1963, 
Dr. Harris has done much 
in his career to promote 
healthy eating. 
In 1998 he published 
“The Scientific Basis of 
Vegetarianism” 
and sent the book to 
every member of the US 
Congress to inform them 
of the destructive effects 
of government subsidies 
for animal agriculture. 
Dr. Harris now continues 
discussing vitamin B12 
supplementation. 
I think if you just add 
a little Red Star T-66 35 
nutritional yeast to any 
recipe, you’ll get enough. 
A teaspoon of the stuff 
will give you 
your day’s requirement 
for vitamin B12. 
That’s the only 
nutritional yeast that 
I can recommend. 
I can also tell you that 
most of the other things 
that have been alleged to 
have B12 in them, like 
spirulina, and I think nori, 
various seaweeds, have 
B12 analogues don’t. 
They look like B12 from 
a molecular standpoint, 
but they’re lacking 
the essential component, 
which is cobalamin. 
Dr. Harris has long been 
concerned about 
the consequences of 
livestock raising 
on public health which 
include its large role in 
spreading deadly illnesses. 
There is a book which 
was written 
by a couple of 
non-vegetarian doctors, 
who conclude that 75% 
of the contagious diseases 
that humans suffer from 
we get from 
domesticated animals. 
And the swine flu is 
just one example. 
Swine flu and the bird flu 
seem to interchange. 
The swine flu, 
people should start by 
understanding that 
that virus was a normal 
inhabitant of the GI tract
of waterfowl; ducks 
carry the influenza virus. 
They can then transmit it 
to the swine, and the 
swine transmits it to us, 
and their manner 
of transmission is 
fecal contamination. 
But we transmit it 
to each other by aerosol. 
If somebody with the flu 
sneezes on you, 
or you get some dirt 
off the person’s hands, or 
maybe from the cook that 
has a case of the flu, 
then you get it. 
Dr. Harris provides us 
with two simple, 
practical tips on 
choosing healthy foods. 
First of all, if it doesn’t 
have fiber in it, 
don’t eat it.  
All these animal foods 
have no fiber, because 
animals cannot 
synthesize cellulase, 
which is the main 
component of fiber. 
And refined sugar and 
vegetable oil also have 
no fiber because they are 
either 100 % sugar 
or 100% fat. 
Here is another bit of 
advice: if man made it, 
don’t eat it. 
That’s probably the most 
important piece of advice 
I have here. 
How should parents 
help their children 
who want to adopt 
a plant-based diet? 
Get one of any number of 
well written diet books
or vegetarian books 
by professional authors, 
by MDs who’ve had 
experience. 
And there are lots of them. 
You can read (John) 
McDougall, you can read 
(Michael) Klaper. 
Read a good book written 
by somebody that knows 
what he’s talking about. 
And make sure that 
your kid gets vitamin B12. 
Now, that’s an essential. 
The other possible 
nutrient that might be 
valuable, particularly in 
a neo-natal child, is DHA, 
which is one of 
the omega-3 fatty acids. 
And that is 
vitally important in the 
membrane structure 
of the brain and 
the developing retina. 
For new mothers, 
Dr. Harris strongly 
recommends breastfeeding 
over formula feeding.  
So pregnant women 
have to give 
some thought to this. 
I absolutely don’t think 
there is any substitute 
for breastfeeding. 
And the best breast milk 
comes from 
a well-nourished, 
vegan mother.
Dr. Harris always 
encourages people to 
stop smoking and 
alcohol consumption. 
In addition, he advocates 
doing regular exercise, 
especially running. 
He sets a good example 
for others 
with his fitness routine. 
My daily exercise is 
about 38 flights of stairs 
in my condo. 
And I swim a half-mile
I do some 
light weightlifting. 
I used to do 
heavy weightlifting, but 
I found out that you can 
bulk up and as soon as 
you stop weightlifting 
you lose it all. 
So I just stay with 
the light weights. 
And then my main activity 
is acrobatic trampoline, 
which gives you 
an aerobic work out, 
which is equivalent to 
competitive running.
Dr. Harris’s other 
favorite sport may be 
a bit of surprise to many.
I was a hang glider until 
1998, and then I switched 
and started skydiving. 
I actually made my first 
skydive the day after
I retired from
medical practice.
At almost 80 years of age, 
Dr. Harris still 
skydives with friends. 
We sincerely thank 
Dr. Harris for 
his splendid example 
of following the healthy 
vegan lifestyle 
and wish him continued 
health and happiness.
Hi, I’m Dr. Bill Harris. 
I’m a board member and 
the TV coordinator for 
the Vegetarian Society 
of Hawaii. 
Be Veg, 
Go Green, 
and Save the Planet. 
For more details 
on Dr. William Harris, 
please visit
www.VegSource.com/harris
“The Scientific Basis 
for Vegetarianism” 
is available 
at the same website
Compassionate viewers, 
thank you for joining us 
on this edition of 
Healthy Living. 
Up next is 
Science and Spirituality 
after Noteworthy News. 
May we all be embraced 
by Heaven’s love and light.
Meet the soft-hearted 
Doberman Pinscher 
canine who did 
everything to let 
his caregiver know 
that an elderly neighbor, 
who was hidden 
from view, needed help. 
I tried feeding him and 
he wouldn’t do anything. 
I called a friend of mine, 
who trains animals, 
and they said, 
“Just let the dog out. 
He’ll take you to 
whatever the problem is.” 
Sensing that 
a human diver was 
struggling in 
the deep icy water, 
Mila the beluga whale 
immediately 
rushed to her aid.
Everyone was surprised 
to see Mila carrying 
the diver and then pulling 
her up to the surface. 
Join us for 
the presentation 
of the Shining World 
Hero Award 
to Jackson the Dog 
and Mila the Whale, 
Thursday, April 8, 
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.