With diverse flora
and fauna, magnificent
natural landscapes, and
an ecological biosphere
that supports life,
this wondrous planet
is our earthly home.
From our animal
co-inhabitants
to the lush rainforests
and life-giving soil,
we cherish all these
as gifts from the Creator.
It is a common theme
in the world’s major
faiths that during
our temporary stay here,
we should be good
stewards of Mother Earth.
Throughout the years,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
has shared
the message of leading
a balanced life
while following
a spiritual path.
Not only must we nourish
our spirits,
but we share
the responsibility
to care for nature
and our fellow beings.
In light of recent
scientific evidence which
pinpoint the raising of
livestock as the number one
contributor to climate change,
Supreme Master Ching Hai
affirms
the important message
she has noted for over
the past two decades:
we must be vegan and
practice sustainable living.
We invite you to listen to
a compilation of excerpts from
Supreme Master Ching Hai’s
lectures entitled
“The Best Way to
Restore the Biodiversity
of Our Planet.”
Thank you, Earth-loving viewers,
for your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Join us again tomorrow
for part 2 of
“The Best Way to
Restore the Biodiversity
of Our Planet.”
And now,
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
is coming up next, right
after Noteworthy News.
Please stay tuned.
We wish you a peaceful
and blessed weekend.
It’s a joy to have your
eco-conscious presence
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Part 3 of
“The Best Way to
Restore the Biodiversity
of Our Planet”
will continue next Friday.
Up next is
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants right after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
Please stay tuned.
May your days be filled
with brilliant Lights and
the Music of Heaven.
We appreciate
your happy company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Join us again tomorrow
for part 4 of
“The Best Way to Restore the Biodiversity of Our Planet.”
Up next is Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants right
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
Please stay tuned.
May you be guided
by wisdom and kindness
in your everyday life.
Thank you,
gracious viewers,
for your company
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Join us again next Friday
for the conclusion of
“The Best Way to
Restore the Biodiversity of Our Planet.”
Up next is Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants right
after Noteworthy News
here on
Supreme Master Television.
Wishing you many
happy moments every day.
Gracious viewers,
thank you for your
heartfelt presence
for today’s episode of
Between Master
and Disciples.
Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants
is coming up next, right
after Noteworthy News.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
May Heavens bless you
and your loved ones
with a joyous weekend.
What effect does
meat consumption have
on biodiversity?
Charlie,
meat consumption has
a huge destructive impact
on biodiversity, which is
essential for our Earth
to function and thus
must be preserved.
No matter how small,
each species has a role
to help balance
our ecosystem,
scientifically proven.
And yet,
consumption of both fish
and animal flesh continue
and are wreaking
havoc on biodiversity
around the globe.
In the oceans
and fresh waterways,
so many species of fish
have already been lost,
with complete
aquatic environments
such as coral reefs
being decimated by such
practices as trawling and
fishing with explosives.
On land,
meat consumption
is responsible for
vast regions being
cleared for grazing crops,
such as soy, that
are fed to livestock.
One example is seen
in the deforested Amazon
areas that have gone from
lush forest to bare fields
used for cattle grazing
or primarily
animal-feed crops.
With these activities
essentially robbing
our biodiversity, there
has been an alarming rise
in the disappearance
of plants and animals.
The 2005 Millennium
Ecosystem Assessment
Report noted that
some 30% of
the mammal, bird,
and amphibian species
currently are threatened
with extinction –
all due to human actions.
And one of the most
comprehensive studies
ever conducted
in the field is now
forecasting that
over a million species
will be lost
in the coming 50 years.
Isn’t that a sad affair?
Besides the land
being cleared
for livestock raising,
the livestock itself causes
further biodiversity loss
due to potent
greenhouse emissions,
which accelerate
global warming.
Many studies
have documented
declining populations of
penguins, polar bears,
plants, trees, migratory
birds and many others –
all linked to
rising temperatures
on the planet.
Even desert animals
have been affected, like
the Malian elephants
that have been perishing
in high numbers
because their trunks
can no longer reach
the sinking ground water.
The answer to all of this
is quite clear:
Stop the meat consumption.
Stop it yesterday.
This will eliminate
the so-called need for
livestock raising, which
will immediately return
immense amounts of land
to natural sustainability
or to natural
growing methods that
allow biodiversity
to be replenished.
This is the way
we need to go, and fast.
The United Nations
Food and Agriculture
Organization said that
the livestock industry
is the major cause of
the most pressing
world problems, namely,
global warming,
land degradation,
air and water pollution,
and loss of biodiversity.
Can you believe this?
It’s like that.
For example,
global warming,
with no animal breeding
industries,
we immediately stop
the number one cause of
greenhouse gas emissions.
Not just CO2,
not just carbon dioxide,
but also methane, nitrous oxide,
black carbon from
burning down the trees
for the livestock,
and also toxic gases
like hydrogen sulfide.
This kind of gas, even
if you just breathe once,
you die immediately,
if it’s a strong enough
concentration.
Some of them are much
more potent than CO2,
like nitrous oxide.
The livestock sector is
the number one source of
nitrous oxide emissions,
and it is almost 300 times
more heat-trapping
than CO2
over a 100-year period.
Now, methane
and black carbon
are what scientists call
short-lived gases, meaning, although
they are very potent
climate warmers, they
dissipate and exit the
atmosphere very quickly.
And it’s not just
global warming
we are talking about.
If we are vegan,
we don’t have to worry
about avian flu,
which was found in 22 out of 33 provinces
in Indonesia alone,
and has caused
millions of poultry deaths
and caused many human
fatalities in Indonesia –
more human deaths
in your country than
in any other country
due to the deadly form
of avian flu.
If we are vegan,
Indonesia’s coral reefs,
known as the
“Amazon of the Seas”
for their thousands
of marine species, will be
left in peace and beauty,
and will protect us.
The coral reef is
a protector of our lives,
of the sea.
Right now it is endangered,
the coral reef,
due to overfishing,
which includes
a destructive form that
uses gruesome methods
like cyanide poisoning
and blasting the fish with
bombs and dynamite.
My God.
The World Resources
Institute stated that
these types of fishing
only bring short-term
profit and will cost
the Indonesian economy
more than
US$600 million
in losses over 20 years.
Moreover,
around the world,
countless enormous
ocean dead zones will
have a chance to return
to life, because the rivers
and the lakes that were
polluted by manure
and toxic fertilizers
for animal feed will be
left alone to purify
themselves and recover.
Also, when we stop
vacuuming all the poor
fish out of the sea,
they will have a chance
to restore the balance
in the oceans.
We desperately need
the fish in the sea
to balance the ocean;
otherwise, our lives
will be in danger.
God puts them there
for a reason.
By the way, at least
one-third of all the
world’s fish caught
and murdered today
is fed to livestock –
not to us humans even.
On land,
millions of hectares
will be spared
livestock’s serious effects
of soil erosion,
deforestation, poisonous
water pollution, and
displacement of wildlife -
if all turn to vegan.
Scientists found that
forests are resilient and
can grow back
if given a chance –
very fast.
We have seen
that evidence
in some parts of the world.
The scientists also
observed that when the
ocean is healthy again,
even the dead coral reefs
will revive themselves.
Imagine!
Nature is miraculous
and incredible.
But in order to witness
nature’s recovery,
we must not let
our current way of life
continue. We cannot
continue this way,
or else we will pass
the point of no return
and then we will have a
runaway planetary crisis;
then we might lose
the whole planet
or the life on the planet.
Fortunately, we have the
solution ready at hand,
which is the
organic vegan solution.
It’s so simple, so easy,
we might overlook it.
We might not believe it,
but if we look into
all the scientific and the
physical evidence so far,
we have to accept this
organic vegan solution
as the one and only to
save our planet right now.
Instead of
spending more money
on new technology,
we even save money
from having to buy meat
and subsidize meat
with our tax dollars.
We simply cannot depend
on green technology
alone.
Now, there is also
an invisible aspect
to the reversal
in the destruction.
A compassionate person
harms no one and,
therefore, brings no harm
upon himself.
That is why in Buddhism,
they say that
the moment we drop
the butcher’s knife, then
we are protected,
then we can become
the Buddha, the saint.
It’s really like that.
We hear real stories
about hospital patients
who had a terminal
sickness like cancer,
turned vegetarian
or vegan, and then
the tumor disappeared,
so operations were
cancelled and doctors
were very astonished.
So, people turned vegans
and the terminal cancer
situation was gone and
operations cancelled
and the doctors were
very surprised.
Because the vegan diet
protects us from inside out,
starting immediately,
so that all kinds of
calamities will avoid us,
stay away from us.
And on a bigger scale,
our planet will also
be healed.
Just like an individual
being healed by
turning to
a compassionate diet –
like attracts like.
The good, loving,
compassionate energy
will ward off
the darkness that is
looming toward us, that
is next to us right now.
We will, in short, have
a paradise on Earth.
If you have
ever wondered
what that might be like,
we may soon live to see
the day when all beings
will truly live by your
nation’s motto, that is
“Unity in Diversity” –
in oneness,
understanding, caring,
faith, and happiness.
I invite everyone to share
the hopeful vision that
we will save the planet,
and will make it
a Heaven one.
Besides destroying
our precious forests,
livestock farms also
contaminate
or even completely
kill our water systems.
They degrade
once-fertile soil, they
destroy our biodiversity,
and they release vast
amounts of extremely
dangerous methane and
nitrous oxide, and what
you call hydrogen sulfide
as well, which are
heating up the planet now
100 times,
300 times more than
carbon dioxide.
So, please
keep your airplane,
keep your car,
keep your train,
keep your ship;
leave them alone
for the time being –
just take out the meat
from our diet.
And stop blaming the
CO2 for every problem
of global warming
on our planet.
We are to be blamed.
The meat industry
is to be blamed.
The meat industry is
the one we have to focus
on to stop, to abolish,
to stop the climate change
and to stop the waste
of the forests and land,
stop talking around
the subject.
Talk to the point:
meat industry must stop.
Apart from
destroying our planet,
it is destroying
our human quality.
It is destroying our
compassionate nature.
It is destroying
the spark of God,
the part of God that
we belong to.
We must stop
the livestock industry.
Stop the livestock
industry - that would be
the most effective way
to halt global warming
and restore our planet.
It will save
our precious forests,
which takes decades
to grow, and create
more natural forests
that we need to
reduce global warming.
Stop the livestock
industry - that would be
the most effective way
to halt global warming
and restore our planet.
It will save
our precious forests,
which takes decades
to grow, and create
more natural forests
that we need to
reduce global warming.
Without our lungs,
we cannot survive.
So Prince Charles has
lately been highly active
about climate change, and particularly about
protecting
the tropical rainforest.
He said to
the European Parliament,
“The lives of billions
of people depend on
your response and
none of us will be
forgiven by our children
and grandchildren
if we falter and fail.”
I’m sorry to say, but
I cannot even guarantee
that our grandchildren
will have a chance
to be born to say that,
if the leaders don’t
agree together
to stop the meat industry.
Talk direct to the subject,
not talk around it.
It’s really that urgent.
I pray the world leaders
will awaken to this
reality, immediately,
and act properly, now.
I’m very touched by
the noble qualities that
you lovingly convey
to all beings,
not just those in the
conference hall today.
Attending the premiere of
your two books today,
I have a small question
and I wish to hear
some of your insights.
That is: according to
Darwin’s theory
on species evolution,
it’s a struggle for survival
and natural selection.
Human beings are the
greatest testimony of this.
Please kindly share
with us your views
on Darwin’s theory.
Thank you.
Yes. Yes, Mr. Đoàn.
Scientifically speaking,
it has always been good
the way nature unfolds
naturally, yes, naturally.
Darwin’s theory is about
a natural evolution, not
a forced, artificial, cruel,
disturbing, interfering
by human’s way,
the way we’re doing.
So, Darwin’s suggestion
is that
we leave nature alone
as much as possible,
interfere
as less as possible.
The natural evolution
is that we let it evolve.
But here,
we come interfering
with everything.
We raise the animals,
we force them
in cramped little crates that
they could not even
move around,
so we breed disease
and we cause suffering
to ourselves by eating
these disease-filled flesh
of animals –
cause suffering to them,
cause suffering to us.
In the natural world,
there is no force-fed
foie gras, there are
no forced-fed cows,
no cramped pigs,
no forced pregnancy for
pigs and cows and dogs
and birds - any kind.
We just let it evolve
the way nature intends.
So eating animals
will not help them
to evolve at all.
Even if we say we want
animals to evolve, then
we have to let them live
first in order to evolve.
If we eat them all,
how do they have
a chance to evolve? And
we can see for ourselves
already that killing,
torturing animals,
eating animals has not
been helpful to our
evolution ecologically,
economically,
scientifically, medically –
nothing.
And it only brings us
trouble and suffering
up to now, like
the mad cow disease,
the swine flu, the bird flu,
so many diseases,
etc., etc., that now
we can’t even deal with.
Even AIDS/HIV
also came from
eating the wild animals.
So, if we live the way
nature intended, like
you have mentioned that
Darwin’s theory that
we have to let everything
evolve, then we just
let nature evolve.
Here we force nature
into our will; we want
to change nature.
That’s why we have
so many unnatural
outcomes, diseases,
disasters -
earthquakes, typhoon –
more and more every day.
And now our planet
is going because of our
interfering with nature,
because we don’t live
according to nature.
So if we want to
live according to nature
and let things evolve
accordingly, then we
should respect all nature.
Right now, we interfere
too much with nature and
we even breed animals
unnaturally, like at least
55 billion livestock
per year, and
billions more fish, etc.
These are not
natural made.
We even breed fish
in a confined area;
and these numbers have
since increased and are
continuously increasing.
Can this be called
ecological or natural
at all?
How can any species
evolve when we keep
forcing them,
torturing them,
and killing them?
Moreover, we
went against our own
human evolution as well,
as we were biologically
made to digest
only plant-based food.
Humans are
naturally herbivores,
not carnivores.
It is explained in detail
by Dr. Milton Mills in a
well-known article called
“The Comparative
Anatomy of Eating,”
and confirmed by others
such as the famous
evolution expert
Dr. Richard Leakey and
the editor-in-chief of
The American Journal
of Cardiology,
Dr. William Roberts.
So, the answer of where
humans belong in species
evolution is clear.
We are not their predator.
We are their protector
and friend.
We have to protect
all species so that we can
keep our biodiversity and
keep a natural evolution
for all beings,
including humans.
Hallo, Master.
I watched your DVD
and saw the magnificent
Lake Amoura.
To my knowledge,
there are not many places
left nowadays
that are peaceful for
the wild animal friends
like the surroundings
of Lake Amoura.
What can be done to help
the wild animal friends
have a peaceful
and good life similar to
that of those
in Lake Amoura region?
Thank you.
Director Nguyễn Thị Nhiệm,
thank you for your caring
and thoughtful question.
One of the words that
you mentioned is actually
a key to providing
a good life for our
animal co-inhabitants,
that is the word “peace.”
Where there is peace
for the animals, they also
can have a good life.
The best is that we can
protect their abodes,
leaving them as
untouched and unharmed
as possible.
The wilds really don’t
need much help from us
if we can just allow them
their freedom
and their sovereignty.
If the animals know
the atmosphere is safe
and they will not
be harmed – and this
they do know, very well
– then they are far more
comfortable and at ease.
So, one thing we can do
is to encourage
governments’ and
individuals’ protection
of their habitats to ensure
that it is not continually
lost to other purposes
such as deforestation
and hunting and fishing.
Just to give an example,
the rainforests
of Southeast Asia
have some of the highest
deforestation rates
in the world.
This means the animals
are constantly losing
their homes,
with many that have
become endangered
or even extinct.
Along these same lines,
the other step that
we can take to enhance
the animals’ sense of
peace is to not eat them.
It’s one thing
to try to imagine how
they must feel having
their homes invaded,
with trees crashing down
around them or
on top of them, and all
their food and cover, gone,
but then having to
fear being eaten as well –
there can be nothing
more terrifying!
So, Madame Nguyễn,
to ensure the peace and
comfort of all our
animal co-inhabitants
like that in Lake Amoura,
we really should first
cease to consume them,
any animals at all.
This will broadcast
a message of peace
that will go around
the entire planet and
will help immensely with
their sense of well-being.
Then, the wild areas and
habitats will be restored
as will be the animals’
natural lives.
That’s the best way to
protect them, to show
our love to them.
We have to hurry
and make Heaven so that
everything will go well,
not just physically,
emotionally, health-wise,
but even technologically.
We will develop
unimaginable inventions,
technology. And then
we can understand
each other like the beings
in Heaven, without
even spoken language, if
we don’t want to speak.
Livestock raising is
responsible for countless
adverse environmental
effects, each of which
further aggravates
global warming.
According to
the United Nations
and other studies,
livestock raising is known
to cause the following
devastating effects:
1. Deforestation:
Livestock raising
is the single largest
human use of land,
and the main reason
for deforestation.
Since 1970,
livestock production has
been responsible for
90% of the Amazon
deforestation,
to clear land for pasture
and grow animal feed crops.
A rainforest area the size
of a football field
is destroyed every second
to produce just
250 hamburgers.
Scientists warn
that if we continue
on this damaging path,
the Earth’s forests
will soon stop absorbing
greenhouse gases,
and instead will start to
release huge quantities of
carbon dioxide (CO2).
Moreover, deforestation
for livestock activities
also produces black carbon.
Black carbon is
a greenhouse particle
that is 680 times
as heat-trapping as CO2,
and causes the ice sheets
and glaciers around the
world to melt even faster.
Up to 40% of black
carbon emissions come
from burning forests
for livestock.
2. Soil erosion
and desertification:
Over 50% of the world’s
soil erosion is caused
by livestock, which along
with deforestation
leads to desertification.
3. Biodiversity loss:
Livestock is the leading
cause of animal and
plant extinction due to
land degradation and
other habitat-destroying
effects.
The livestock industry
is killing off our beautiful
wildlife, including
Mexico's own.
4. Deadly pollution:
Of all sectors,
the meat industry
is the biggest source
of water pollution.
Excessive and unregulated
animal waste,
chemical fertilizers,
pesticides, antibiotics,
and other livestock-related
contaminants
choke our waterways
and create oceanic
dead zones, such as
the massive one
in the Gulf of Mexico.
5. Disease:
Over 65% of
human infectious diseases
are known to be transmitted
by animals.
The filthy and
inhumane conditions
of factory farming
harbor lethal bacteria
and viruses such as
avian and swine flu,
which we all know is
a pandemic continuing
its global deadly toll.
6. Food waste:
Livestock uses up to
12 times the amount of
grain as the same amount
of vegetable protein.
About 730 million tons
of the world’s grain
harvests are used to
produce animal protein.
This could feed
all the hungry people,
numbering 1 billion
in the world,
and many times over.
7. Water waste:
It takes over 1,200 gallons
of water to grow
1 serving of beef, but
only 98 gallons of water
for one complete,
nutritionally balanced
vegan meal.
While 1.1 billion people
lack access to
safe drinking water,
we waste 3.8 trillion tons
of precious clean water
each year for
livestock production.
8. Energy and
Resource waste:
Animal products require
8 times as much
fossil fuel energy to be
produced, compared
to vegetable products.
A study found that meat
and dairy production
in Mexico use the most
agricultural supplies and
resources in the country,
and this is reflected
elsewhere around
the world as well.
All the evidence speaks
so loud and clear.
If these resources –
land, water, and grain –
were turned instead
towards the direct support
of human life instead of
livestock,
what a different world
we would have.
Respected climate
scientists including
Dr. James Hansen of NASA,
Dr. Carlos Nobre
of Brazil’s
National Institute
for Space Research, and
Dr. Rajendra Pachauri,
head of the UN
Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change
(IPCC) – all have stated
that reducing
meat consumption
or becoming vegetarian
would be an effective
solution to global warming.
That is, we have to live
an animal-free lifestyle,
a compassionate lifestyle.
Thirty years ago,
my husband and I decided
to become vegetarian
based on the principle
of respect for life
and non-violence.
Today,
doctors recommend us
not to abuse them
for health reasons.
Additionally,
we are finding out that
this excessive consumption
not only negatively
affects human health but
the health of the planet
as well.
When a hamburger
arrives on my table,
what does it involve
in terms of climate change?
There are a lot of
scientific reports made
about the costs
of meat eating,
so I’m sure you are asking
for the sake of people
who may not be aware.
So, please,
allow me to state
some of the costs of
what we are dealing with
for the next time
one is about
to eat a hamburger.
The cost of a hamburger
appears to us as cheap,
but without
the enormous subsidies
involved in
the meat industry,
the real monetary cost
of a hamburger
would be much higher,
much higher,
at least US$12.
There are so many costs
and resources involved
for that one hamburger
that you are asking about,
from the field
to the plate,
and all the processes
in between.
From burning
the precious forests to
growing the corn and soy
to feed the cows,
to making the fertilizer and
watering these feed crops,
to giving the cows
huge amounts of
healthy land and water,
hormones and antibiotics
are also forcefully fed
to the cows,
and we will eat all that.
Then, the transport
over long distances
here and there and finally
to the slaughterhouse,
to freezing the meat
so that it does not rot
as it is supposed to,
then finally,
it has to be cooked
before reaching the plate
- and cooked well
because, for example,
the US Department
of Agriculture found
that 89% of
beef hamburger patties
contained traces of
the deadly E. coli bacteria.
Eighty-nine percent
of the beef hamburger
contains traces of E. coli.
There is more that goes
in the hamburger than
what you think you see.
Here are just
a few examples.
Destruction of land:
First,
land must be cleared
to raise the cows.
For one hamburger,
there are 55 square feet
of destroyed
tropical rainforest,
which is an equivalent
of 75 kilograms of CO2,
or driving your car
for 5 days straight.
Also, biodiversity loss.
In the process, we lose
up to 30 plant species,
100 insect species –
I mean the beneficial one
as well - and dozens
of birds, mammals, etc.
Now,
it contributes to hunger.
Some of
the deforested land
is used to grow grains.
Oftentimes, poor families
are forced off their land
in the process.
One hamburger costs
4 pounds of grain
that was consumed
by the cow - that’s
about 3 loaves of bread
or 8 plates of spaghetti
that could have fed a
number of hungry people.
So, another cold cost
of a hamburger
is human starvation.
Now,
we have topsoil loss:
For one hamburger,
10 pounds of topsoil
for farming
are eroded and lost
for hundreds of years,
a very serious problem.
Now, greenhouse gases.
Next, one hamburger alone
is responsible for
greenhouse gas emissions.
The methane gas emitted
for that piece of meat
alone weighs
approximately 4.7 ounces,
but it has the same
heat-trapping effect
as 6.8 pounds
of CO2, because
methane is very potent.
Water waste:
not only land and food,
but water is also required
in huge amounts.
Just one hamburger
costs 625 gallons
of clean water,
or, it would cost you
about 45 showers.
A month and a half
or two months
without taking a shower,
for one hamburger alone.
Imagine that!
On a side note,
one cow in his lifetime
before slaughter,
uses enough fresh water
to float a large naval ship.
Imagine that again!
Just one cow.
Now, we have
fossil fuel waste.
One hamburger costs
thousands of miles
of transportation,
all the way
from the pasture
to the feedlot, then
all the way to slaughterhouse,
and then to the market.
So, no matter if you try to
buy your food locally
to save emissions or not,
you can’t win
if you eat meat.
There is much more
greenhouse gas that goes
into this hamburger.
In fact, one hamburger
uses up 6.5 pounds
of fossil fuels,
or about a quarter gallon
of gasoline.
That’s over 16 times
the amount needed
for one full,
nutritious vegan meal.
Now,
we have health hazard.
There is also the cost
in lives.
In just
one hamburger patty,
there are pieces of dozens,
or sometimes
even hundreds of
individual cows,
all their flesh
mixed together.
And, you’re getting
more than what you think
you’re buying.
You’re buying
a health hazard.
There is saturated fat
which causes
heart disease and stroke,
there are also extra things,
such as
growth-inducing hormones,
traces of antibiotics
that are fed regularly
to the poor cows.
The actual bacteria
that are resistant
to those antibiotics,
these resistant bacteria
are called superbugs.
So, the added cost here
is a multi-fold risk
to our health.
There are even more costs
after the hamburger
is eaten.
For example, a woman
loses 28 milligrams
of calcium after eating
just one hamburger,
which weakens her bones.
And there is rampant risk
of potentially
deadly E. coli infection,
as beef is a primary source
of this bacteria.
And again, there are risks
of heart disease,
cancer, mad cow disease,
bird flu, pig disease,
swine flu and other
meat-related diseases.
We also have
other human costs
like the poor families
being pushed off their land
for cattle production;
the adults and children
of the world
who are perishing
due to hunger;
the grief and sorrow of the families
who lost loved ones
due to meat-related
diseases, etc., etc.
As for the bigger picture
of how much meat eating
is costing our planet –
the cows
in such unnaturally
huge numbers, more than
1 billion on the planet,
are responsible
for more than 50%
or even far more, of total
greenhouse gas emissions
on Earth.
Nitrous oxide, which is
300 times more potent
than CO2, is being emitted
in vast quantities
from the fertilizers
required to produce
the food crops for the cattle.
The livestock industry
produces at least 67%
of all the world’s
nitrous oxide emissions.
So, a hamburger,
as you can see,
is clearly unaffordable,
not only in global warming,
but also in deforestation,
soil erosion
and desertification,
water shortage,
water pollution,
loss of biodiversity –
not to mention
the negative health and
bad karmic (retribution)
consequence prices
we also have to pay –
and loss of lives,
precious lives.
Hallo,
on behalf of the members
of our society,
I would like to ask
Master two questions.
On one hand, I have
encountered the opinion
of the Food and
Agriculture organization,
which says that it is
necessary to decrease
the meat consumption
by half just to ensure that
the current situation,
the ecological situation
on the planet,
won’t deteriorate further.
That was in 2006.
Isn’t this statement
exaggerated?
And how do you see
the current situation?
And the second question:
Nowadays, we perceive
the growing deterioration
of our current
climatic situation.
We also see that
the economic crisis
is increasing and,
furthermore, witness
a growing moral crisis.
Does any connection
exist between these crises
and the current diet
of the people?
Hallo, sir.
Welcome to our meeting,
Mr. Škvaril.
How are you?
I think you are correct
that reducing
meat production by 50%
is a very underestimate,
in part because we have
waited so long to change.
So our time has become
too short in fact, and
the situation is too dire.
Just in case you are not
aware, or maybe
others viewers are not,
I will share with you
some of the facts
of where we are today.
With melting that
has caused the biggest
ice loss ever known
in the Arctic, scientists
now tell us that
the region is warming
at the rate twice as fast as
the rest of the world.
As you may already
know, two German ships
have just traveled
through the Northeast
Passage because
the ice all melted, and
that is the first time
in known human history
that the ships
could pass through.
So the vast ice
beneath Greenland is also
melting even faster than
previously predicted.
Many researchers are
saying that at the rate
of current warming,
there is almost no way
for our world to stay
within the limits
of a 2 degree Celsius
temperature rise, which
is the maximum that will
still ensure the safety
of most life on the planet.
But even though
our predicament is
very grave, we do still
have time if we act now,
and the solution is
still very simple.
Well, you know it, right?
It’s the vegan diet –
no animal products.
No more killing,
no more torturing,
no more even
experimenting
with animals,
no more raising animals
for meat or any other
purposes, except
to protect, love, and
take care of the animals.
This is the key.
If everyone switches to
this beneficial lifestyle,
our planet will be cooled
in no time,
scientifically speaking
and my promise.
One reason for this is that
the main contributing gas
from livestock, which is
methane, traps 72 times
more heat than CO2
over a 20-year period.
And then there is
the other gases,
nitrous oxide for example,
which comes from
the unregulated
waste contamination and
fertilizer runoff of crops
that are primarily grown
for livestock to consume.
This gas traps 289 times -
289 times! - more heat
than CO2, more than
carbon dioxide.
According to
the most recent figures
from scientists,
livestock raising is
actually responsible for
more than 50%
of global warming.
More than 50% is
coming from meat
and dairy production!
Imagine that?
So, with 55 billion
animals currently being
murdered every year
for meat consumption,
you can imagine
how much the Earth
would be restored
if this is stopped.
The original
United Nations report
in 2006, “Livestock’s
Long Shadow,” spoke in
bold terms even already
about the damage caused
by the livestock industry,
saying that,
“It is one of the topmost
significant contributors
to the most serious
environmental problems
at every scale,
from local to global.”
Furthermore,
I would mention a few
of the problems
the United Nations
and others have noted
are coming from
livestock raising
and meat consumption.
First,
depleted land and forests:
according to
the United Nations,
livestock is the main
reason for deforestation
and the loss of
our vital trees, which
in turn is causing
tragic declines
in natural biodiversity.
Livestock raising is also
among the top factors
in degrading our lands
through soil erosion
and pollution, as well as
climate change.
Second,
wasted resources:
for every kilogram of
animal protein produced,
livestock are fed about
6 kilograms of
plant protein.
The US livestock
population currently
consumes more than
7 times as much grain
as the entire
American population.
Third, wasted water:
with current droughts
and water shortages
already affecting millions
and only expected to get
worse, worse and worse,
scientists have found that
each person eating a
meat and dairy based diet
uses around 4,500
gallons of water per day,
compared to 300 gallons
per day for a vegan diet.
This also means that
1 pound of
animal protein requires
100 times more water
to produce than
1 pound of grain protein.
Over the course of a year,
the vegan diet
saves approximately
1.5 million gallons
of water per person.
Fourth, wasted energy.
Now, the artificial
indoor environment
of the factory farm
and slaughterhouse
use massive amounts
of energy.
In fact, it takes 8 times
as much fossil fuel to
produce animal products
as to produce plant food.
Fifth, environmental
contamination.
The United Nations has
also recognized livestock
as inflicting some of
the biggest damage to our
dwindling water supplies.
Just to give you an idea
of the scale:
one dairy farm alone with
2,500 cows produces
as much solid waste
as a city with
over 400,000 residents.
This waste, which
sometimes contains
bacterial contaminants
such as E. coli, ends up
in waterways that
affect drinking water
and aquatic life.
Along with the waste
are chemical fertilizers
runoff used on crops
fed to animals which
have been documented
by scientists to cause
dead zones in the ocean
as well as
toxic algae outbreaks,
those green moss that
grow in the water.
One such event just
occurred in Brittany,
France, where a majority
of the country’s livestock
and a third of the
dairy farms are located.
On the Brittany coast,
this waste and
chemical runoff
coming into the sea
causes outbreaks of
toxic algae, which emit
the lethal, deadly gas
hydrogen sulfide.
So, recently in the news
we heard of a horse that
died within half a minute
of stepping into the algae
and now
the health concerns
of over 300 people are
being investigated
for the same reason
around that area.
Making all of this worse
is the fact that
animal waste is largely
unregulated - meaning
that there is nothing
to stop these events
of contamination
that can cause
illnesses or even death
for massive numbers
of animals and people.
Just talking about
financial saving alone,
scientists in the
Netherlands found that
of the estimated
US$40 trillion needed
to stop global warming,
a full 80% of this amount
would be saved
with the vegan diet!
That’s a saving of
US$32 trillion
for the simple step
of turning away from
the meat to eating
plant-based goods.
The United Nations has
also recognized livestock
as inflicting some of
the biggest damage to our
dwindling water supplies.
Just to give you an idea
of the scale:
one dairy farm alone with
2,500 cows produces
as much solid waste
as a city with
over 400,000 residents.
This waste, which
sometimes contains
bacterial contaminants
such as E. coli, ends up
in waterways that
affect drinking water
and aquatic life.
Along with the waste
are chemical fertilizers
runoff used on crops
fed to animals which
have been documented
by scientists to cause
dead zones in the ocean
as well as
toxic algae outbreaks,
those green moss that
grow in the water.
Making all of this worse
is the fact that
animal waste is largely
unregulated - meaning
that there is nothing
to stop these events
of contamination
that can cause
illnesses or even death
for massive numbers
of animals and people.
Just talking about
financial saving alone,
scientists in the
Netherlands found that
of the estimated
US$40 trillion needed
to stop global warming,
a full 80% of this amount
would be saved
with the vegan diet!
That’s a saving of
US$32 trillion
for the simple step
of turning away from
the meat to eating
plant-based goods.
According to
a recent announcement
by the United Nations,
the number of people
going hungry
across the world in 2009,
this year, has now
officially exceeded
1 billion.
This is due in part to the
steeply rising food costs
that are part of our
global economic crisis.
However,
this is directly related
to meat consumption.
Because if all the grains
fed to livestock animals
were grown for human
consumption instead,
then the amounts of food
harvested for humans
would be higher
and prices lower.
Logically, no?
Moreover, the
global warming caused
by livestock has resulted
in many instances
of documented extreme
weather and drought,
leading to devastating
crop losses and also driving
food prices sky high.
So, if everyone turns to
the plant-based diet,
we have more food
immediately and an
easing of conditions like
drought and flooding,
with abundant harvests
and food supplies
quickly restored.
In fact, the head
of the United Nations
Framework Convention
on Climate Change,
Mr. Yves de Boer,
already stated
in June 2008 that
“the best solution
would be for us all
to become vegetarians.”
He meant vegans,
because vegetarians
mean people
still drink milk and
related dairy products.
That means we still have
to keep a large amount,
maybe less large but still
a large amount, of cattle,
and that will contribute
to global warming
and further food crisis
and security.
You mention also the
moral crises of our world
and wonder if
there is any connection
to our food choices?
You can guess
the answer to that, right?
Yes, there is, sir, there is.
This is the other reason
we must become vegan.
We have to
stop the cruelty,
the inhumane and
below-human standard
treatment of
all the animals that come
here to bless our world
with their uniqueness
and love.
I mentioned before that
55 billion animals are
murdered every year,
legally
for consumption.
This is not even counting
the billions of fish!
Can we imagine?
There is no bigger
moral crisis than the one
that is created by the
mass massacring of sweet,
innocent, living beings
for our pleasure
when we have other choices.
Such mass murder
is a crime of
global proportions.
And this killing energy
in turn
breeds and strengthens
other negative energy,
which is degrading
our society and
destroying our world.
So, to return ourselves
and our world
to a purer state, one
where all beings can feel
safe, protected and loved,
and where all humans
walk the dignified way
of the children of God,
we have to
stop the killing
of innocent animals.
Stop it now.
Stop it now
and turn to
the merciful way of life,
the natural way of life
that God intended us
to live,
which is the vegan diet.
This will restore
the conscience of
every person who adopts
such a lifestyle as well as
the planet itself.
If the conscience is clear,
we have no more
moral crisis, sir.
We have peace.
We have harmony.
We will have abundance.
So please, Mr. Škvaril,
join in this peace- and
planet-building purpose.
We still have a lot of
work to do, sir,
and not much time.
The United Nations
Food and Agriculture
Organization reported
that livestock raising
is the single largest
human use of land,
the biggest source
of water pollution,
the number one cause
of biodiversity loss,
and the top producer of
human-caused methane
and nitrous oxide.
In fact, the United Nations
has named livestock
as one of the biggest
environmental problems
of our time with
90% of the destruction
of the Amazon rainforest
since 1970
being for cattle
and growing animal feed.
Lush forests are being
turned into barren fields
at a rate of 36
football fields per minute –
36 football fields
per minute! – of rainforest
are being destroyed
as we are speaking.
If you can imagine
how big that is,
how detrimental that is
to our world...
the rainforest is the lung of
our planet; it’s the health
of our co-citizens.
And as the trees are
felled and plants become
more exposed and dry,
they even emit
carbon dioxide
rather than absorb it.
This is another danger
that is attacking us.
In which way
a vegetarian diet
has an influence in the
spiritual life of people?
Hallo, Ms. Bracesco.
Yes. Being veg is
beneficial for any kind of
spiritual advancement.
In fact, all the wise,
ancient teachings of sages
since time immemorial
have highlighted
the importance
of a benevolent
plant-based diet.
It is a
fundamental requirement
of a spiritual practitioner.
The concept behind
forgoing animal products
is ahimsa –
meaning nonviolence.
By partaking of
a vegan diet, we also
avoid the bad retribution
of killing and thus it will
not burden and obstruct
our spiritual journey.
I’m sure you are familiar
with this principle,
Ms. Bracesco,
in your work to save
and protect the animals.
Being vegan simply means
that we protect
all the animals.
This killing of other beings
must be stopped
for humanity to evolve
as a civilization.
The benefits of doing so
are manifold.
Besides the restoration
of health, biodiversity
will be allowed to thrive,
planet equilibrium restored,
along with the easing
of our own conscience
and our capacity for
elevated consciousness.
All these are the fruits of
a more compassionate diet.
This loving attitude also
creates a more peaceful
atmosphere that brings
greater comfort
to all beings.
At peace with ourselves
in the knowledge that
we did not cause anguish
or pain to our
fellow animal brethren,
we will have
the inner tranquility
to pursue
our spiritual endeavors
wholeheartedly.
Before we expect the lion
to lay down peacefully
with the lamb,
we humans must do it first.
As long as the humans
cannot even lay down
peacefully with the lamb,
causing all the anguish,
fear, sorrow, oppression
to weaker beings
and defenseless animals,
we cannot realize
this heavenly dream
as the lion will lie
beside the lamb.
So we must return to
our compassionate self.
We must return to
our glorious status
as the children of God.
We have to
bring Heaven to Earth.