|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
GOOD PEOPLE,GOOD WORKS
Chantal Cooke's Passion for the Planet - P2/2
|
|
|
|
|
Hallo, joyful viewers,
and welcome to today’s
Good People, Good Works
where we are
once again visiting with
British journalist
and environmentalist
Chantal Cooke,
who in 2002 co-founded
Passion for the Planet,
a UK-based radio station
that is dedicated to
helping listeners pursue
greener, healthier, and
more fulfilling lifestyles.
The London Leaders
program brings together
leading civic figures
of diverse backgrounds
to advise the Mayor
of London, England on
various important issues
concerning the city.
In 2009 Chantal Cooke
was appointed
a London Leader
in Sustainability
due to her experience in
promoting green living.
For her vigorous efforts
to preserve
and protect the planet,
Ms. Cooke has received
many awards, including
the Triodos Women in
Ethical Business Award,
the Green Business Award
and the British
Environment
and Media Award.
Ms. Cooke and
her business partner
Kenny Stevens insisted
on “walking their talk,”
when setting up
their radio station.
Thus they minimized
resource consumption
by carefully considering
all the items they needed
and looked for
sustainable ways to
furnish the office.
For example, the tiles
chosen for the walls
are plant-based
and thus are completely
biodegradable.
We put lots and lots of
things in place
right from the beginning.
So, as an example,
a lot of this office has got
recycled furniture in it.
We didn’t go out and
buy lots of new things.
We went round saying
to people, “Have you got
office chairs and have
you got this and so on?”
And then
my mother was great.
She was working
at Chelsea Harbor
at the time and we got
lots of fabric samples
from companies that
were throwing out
old samples of fabric.
And she sat there
with a sewing machine,
and so on.
And we made covers
for the chairs and for the
sofas and things like that.
And I think personally,
they've got a bit more
personality than if we’d
just bought something
from somewhere.
All efforts are also made
to make the running
of the workplace green
as well.
Paper and envelopes used
at the station are made
of recycled materials.
The staff are asked to
turn off their computers
at night and the waste
created is dealt with in
an Earth-friendly manner.
And then it was also about
having certain behaviors
in the office that
we make sure we did.
So turning the lights off
and those sorts of things
is one of them but equally,
putting our composting
into a little tub and then
after a couple of days, I'd
just take it home with me,
and that could be
composted rather than
chucking it in the bin.
We petitioned
the building owner here
and got all the other
companies down
the corridor to get on
with us and said, “We’d
like to have some paper
recycling at the office.”
And we found out
how much that would
cost to take it and get it
all sorted out and then
got everybody in the
building to come and go,
“Yes, we want it too.”
And sure enough,
the building owner
responded and there’s
now paper recycling
actually on site which
gets collected every week.
Participating in London
Leaders Program inspired
Chantal Cooke to create
an initiative to touch
the lives of her fellow
city residents called
“Munch Less Meat.”
So, for my personal project,
because obviously
I've got a passion for
animals, what I wanted
to do was encourage
Londoners to eat
just a little bit less meat.
So you could,
for example, have
a meat-free day a week.
That would have
an impact.
How about learning one
recipe that's vegetarian?
Because I think we tend
to have, four or five
recipes we rotate
round the whole time.
So if one of those was
a vegetarian recipe,
how much difference
would that make?
Could you perhaps
host a dinner party?
Get a whole lot of
meat-eating friends
around and try out
a whole load of
vegetarian stuff.
Ms. Cooke has developed
a delightful website that
provides many
suggestions on ways
one can reduce or end
their meat consumption.
Posted on the site are
useful facts such as
of all diets,
the organic vegan diet is
the one with the smallest
environmental impact.
So you can go to that
website and there's all
different challenges there.
So you can choose which
challenge suits you best.
It will tell you about
some of the savings
that you'll make.
So, I think, as an example
if you had a meat-free
dinner party and there
was six of you altogether,
you'd save something like
14 pounds of grain.
So that grain could
actually be used to
feed somebody else.
So I know you’re not
physically going,
“Oh, here's 14 pounds
and we'll hand it over.”
But it's about showing
you that actually
it's about saving grain
that could feed people
in the developing world.
Perhaps it's about saving
water; it could even be
about saving fossil fuels
and things like that.
So each little thing
you do has an impact.
She has also challenged
all the restaurants
in London
to offer at least two
vegetarian menu options
to encourage diners
to try vegetarian food.
When we return,
we’ll continue
our intriguing interview
with Ms. Cooke.
Please stay tuned to
Supreme Master
Television.
So I think sometimes
we get overwhelmed by
the problem and then go,
“Oh, I’m so tiny, I don’t
make any difference.”
Everything,
absolutely everything
makes a difference and
the most important thing
is to start somewhere.
Welcome back to
Good People, Good Works
as we continue our talk
with journalist,
environmentalist and
co-founder of the Passion
for the Planet radio
station Chantal Cooke.
For as long as she can
remember Ms. Cooke
has loved animals, and
after a sudden realization
during her teen years
she decided to
stop eating meat.
I sat there and I thought,
"Hold on a second,
why am I eating this?"
And actually if you really
push it through to
its logical conclusion,
"If I can eat a cow, well,
why couldn't I
eat a pussycat?" Right.
And the idea of eating
a pussycat is just like,
“Whoa, that's just
(disgusting)!”
You wouldn't do that.
And actually, if I can eat
a pussycat, why am I
not allowed to eat you?"
(Yes.) And to me, it just
seems so, no difference.
So clearly,
for most people,
the idea of eating another
human being would be
pretty repulsive
and probably
for a lot of people, maybe
eating a cat would be
also pretty repulsive,
maybe not as repulsive
as the human being idea.
But actually why is there
some kind of
graduated response to it?
Why is eating a human
worse than eating a cow?
(Yeah.)
I don't get it, really.
(Yes.)
Because it's still eating
somebody else’s flesh
and I just don't think
that's very nice.
I'm perfectly healthy
on a non-meat diet.
So I've got a choice.
Why am I still
going down this route of
eating this stuff which
actually is bad
for the environment,
not entirely great
for my health? (Yes.)
Ethically this is,
very questionable and
we share the planet.
I think sometimes
we get into this thing
where we think that, “So
it's our planet and well,
they're (the animals)
just there for us.”
And actually, they were
here before we were,
a lot of them and
even if they weren't,
this is not about
who was here first and
who it belongs to.
It's actually about
we all share it together.
And if we go back to this
idea of an ecosystem, if I
pulled out all of one type
of animal because
I ate all of it, what impact
does it have on
the eco-system overall?
And without a doubt, we
need animals to survive.
And I think probably a lot
of animals would survive
perfectly well without us.
I'm not entirely sure
we'd survive perfectly
well without them. (Yes.)
So I think it's about
having just a little bit
more respect,
and I can do that.
Wherever she goes,
Chantal Cooke seeks to
inform others about the
benefits of a meat-free
lifestyle, including
when she goes out
for dinner with friends.
That’s an opportunity to
tell somebody about
what I believe
and why I believe it.
The point is you’re
having that conversation
and you’re hopefully
inspiring people.
And even if people might
push it off, given time
and they hear it
more and more often, and
more and more people
start to do it, they will
actually (change).
"Yes, that vegetable bake
does sound quite nice
actually.
Maybe I will try that."
It just takes time.
So I think my advice
would be
don’t get disheartened,
and don’t sit there and
think you’ve got no power.
You’ve got massive
power, and remember,
everything starts
somewhere,
so be that start.
Part of leading a lifestyle
that respects animals,
is doing research to
ensure that the items we
purchase, such as clothes,
shoes, and personal care
products do not involve
cruelty to them
in their production.
Chantal Cooke believes
that improved labelling
on products could
help consumers
make humane and
more informed choices.
I think more information
would be good.
And I think sometimes
actually it would be
really nice, in fact, if you
were allowed to put the
negative stuff on there.
So as an example, when
we look at things like
cosmetics and household
products, most people
assume that they’re
not tested on animals.
Actually the vast majority
of them are tested
on animals.
And if it doesn’t say
it’s not, you can be
pretty sure it has been
tested on an animal.
So actually, how about
having on the back of
all the products saying,
“Has been tested
on animals.”
Because, certainly,
that would make
quite a difference.
So I think more labeling
would absolutely
be a good thing.
What can each of us do
to help preserve
our precious planet?
Ms. Cooke provides her
thoughts on an approach
all of us can take to
help care for
our one and only home.
The absolute best thing
you can do is, to quote
(Mahatma) Gandhi,
“Be the change
you want to see.”
Take those actions,
inspire somebody else.
If somebody else sees you
doing some composting
or some recycling,
they’ll go,
“What are you doing?
Why are you doing that?”
Well, that’s
an opportunity to talk.
Many thanks,
Chantal Cooke,
for starting the
Munch Less Meat
initiative and spreading
constructive information
on green living through
Passion for the Planet
radio.
We wish you
continued success
with your noble work
at the radio station, which
is a splendid platform to
share how we all can live
in greater harmony
across the globe.
For more details on
Passion for the Planet,
please visit
www.PassionforthePlanet.com
Information on
the Munch Less Meat
project is available at
MunchLessMeat.co.uk
Thank you for joining us
today on
Good People, Good Works.
Up next is
The World Around Us,
after Noteworthy News.
May your life
always be graced
with love and wisdom.
Alanna Devine,
a vegetarian Canadian
lawyer and Director
of Animal Welfare
at the Montreal branch
of the Canadian Society
for the Prevention
of Cruelty to
Animals advocates
for improvements
in animal welfare
and anti-cruelty laws at
the municipal, provincial
and federal levels.
We like to see
municipalities put
in place anti-tethering
legislation or
anti-tethering bylaws.
So that means that
no dog can be left
on a chain maybe at all
or longer than two hours.
Be sure to watch
“Alanna Devine,
Guardian of
Animal Welfare,”
airing Thursday, July 22
on Animal World:
Our Co-Inhabitants.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Subtitle
|
|
Arabic , Aulac , Bulgarian , Chinese , Croatian , Czech-Slovak , Dari , Dutch , English , French , German , Gujarati , Hebrew , Hindi , Hungarian , Indonesian , Italian , Japanese , Korean , Malay , Mongol , Mongolian , Persian , Polish , Portuguese , Punjabi , Romanian , Russian , Sinhalese , Slovenian , Spanish , Thai , Turkish , Urdu , Zulu ,
Bulgarian ,
Croatian ,
Dutch , Estonian , Greek , Gujarati ,
Indonesian ,
Mongolian , Nepalese ,
Norwegian , Polish , Punjabi ,
Sinhalese ,
Swedish , Slovenian , Tagalog , Tamil , Zulu
|
|
Scrolls Download |
|
MP3 Download |
|
|
|
|
MP4 download for iPhone(iPod ) |
|
|
Download Non Subtitle Videos
|
|
|
Download by Program
|
|
|
|
|
|
Download by Date
|
Sun |
Mon |
Tue |
Wed |
Thu |
Fri |
Sat |
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
29
|
30
|
|
|
|
|