Halo, Earth-loving viewers, 
and welcome to 
Enlightening Entertainment! 
Today, in honor of World 
Environment Day 2010, 
we’ll present excerpts 
from research articles 
on animal agriculture, 
the leading cause 
of climate change 
as well as other serious 
environmental problems.
The following excerpt 
from the Yale Journal 
of Health Policy, 
Law and Ethics 
discusses the health and
environmental impact 
of today’s meat-related 
food production system. 
Though published 
in 2004,
it still paints an accurate 
picture of the present.
Animal Agriculture
“The current industrial 
food production system 
causes 
environmental effects 
that ultimately lead to 
public health problems 
and, therefore, 
warrant increased 
attention from
public health professionals. 
Irreplaceable 
fossil fuel aquifers are 
being drawn down for 
irrigation of feed crops, 
pesticides and fertilizers 
used to grow animal feed 
contaminate water and soil
and ocean fisheries are 
being depleted to produce 
feed for factory farmed 
poultry, pork and fish. 
Animal feed additives, 
such as antibiotics and 
heavy metals including 
arsenic, end up in manure 
that is spread on fields, 
and manure from 
lagoon spills, leaks, and 
excess land applications 
contaminate waterways. 
Since hogs produce 
up to four times 
as much solid waste 
as an average person, 
a CAFO of 5,000 hogs 
is equivalent 
to a city of 20,000.”    
    
Biodiversity
The 2010 theme of 
World Environment Day 
is “Many Species, 
One Planet, One Future,” 
which coincides 
with the United Nations’ 
2010 International Year 
of Biodiversity.
In the 2006 report, 
“Livestock’s Long Shadow,” 
published by 
the United Nations 
Food and Agriculture 
Organization (FAO), 
livestock was identified 
as a major cause 
of biodiversity loss. 
“We are in an era 
of unprecedented threats 
to biodiversity. 
Livestock now account 
for about 20 percent 
of the total terrestrial 
animal biomass, 
and the 30 percent of the 
Earth’s land surface that 
they now pre-empt was 
once habitat for wildlife. 
Indeed, the livestock sector 
may well be 
the leading player 
in the reduction
of biodiversity, 
since it is the major driver 
of deforestation, 
as well as 
one of the leading drivers 
of land degradation, 
pollution, climate change, 
overfishing, sedimentation 
of coastal areas and 
facilitation of invasions 
by alien species. 
In addition, 
resource conflicts 
with pastoralists threaten 
species of wild predators 
and also protected areas 
close to pastures. 
Indeed, the livestock sector 
may well be 
the leading player 
in the reduction 
of biodiversity.
Deforestation
South America’s 
Amazon rainforest 
is home to 
one of the most diverse 
ecosystems on Earth. 
The rainforest 
regulates rainfall, ensures 
adequate water supplies 
for growing crops, 
and is a vital storehouse 
for carbon. 
But with deforestation, 
vast quantities of carbon 
are released 
into the atmosphere, thus 
worsening climate change 
throughout the planet.
In an article published 
in December 2009, 
president of 
the Earth Policy Institute 
Lester R. Brown shows how
global demand for meat
is at the root
of this problem:
Although the deforestation 
is occurring 
within Brazil,
it is the worldwide growth 
in demand for meat, milk, 
and eggs that is driving it. 
Put simply, saving 
the Amazon rainforest 
now depends 
on curbing the growth 
in demand for soybeans 
by stabilizing 
population worldwide 
as soon as possible. 
And for the world’s 
affluent population,
it means moving down 
the food chain, 
eating less meat and thus 
lessening the growth 
in demand for soybeans. 
With food, as with energy, 
achieving an acceptable 
balance between supply 
and demand 
now means curbing growth 
in demand rather than 
just expanding supply.”
Public Health
Following a year’s 
investigation by 55 
scientists in nine countries,
the 2009 report 
“Public Health Benefits 
of Strategies to 
Reduce Greenhouse-gas 
Emissions” was published
in the prestigious 
British medical journal 
the Lancet. 
The report found that 
a 30% reduction 
in the number of 
livestock animals had the 
benefit of reaching 50% 
greenhouse gas reduction 
goals by 2030 and 
saving 18,000 lives 
in the UK per year from 
the country's #1 killer, 
heart disease.
“We considered 
potential strategies 
for the agricultural sector 
to meet the target 
recommended 
by the UK Committee 
on Climate Change 
to reduce UK emissions 
from the concentrations 
recorded in 1990 
by 80% by 2050, 
which would require 
a 50% reduction by 2030. 
With use of the UK 
as a case study, 
we identified
that a combination of 
agricultural technological 
improvements 
and a 30% reduction 
in livestock production 
would be needed 
to meet this target... 
Coordinated intersectoral 
action is needed 
across agricultural, 
nutritional, public health, 
and climate change 
communities worldwide 
to provide affordable, 
healthy, low-emission diets 
for all societies.”
When we return, 
we’ll discuss studies that 
evaluated more benefits 
of a societal shift 
toward a meat-free 
food production system. 
Please stay tuned 
to Supreme Master 
Television.
Welcome back to 
today’s program honoring 
World Environment Day 
on June 5.
New Opportunities
In the November/
December 2009 issue of 
World Watch Magazine, 
a report by 
Dr. Robert Goodland, 
former lead 
environmental advisor 
to the World Bank, 
and World Bank 
research officer 
Jeff Anhang concluded 
that livestock raising 
is responsible 
for at least 51 percent 
of global warming. 
“It is now possible 
to understand that 
the dramatic expansion 
of the livestock sector 
in recent decades may 
imperil humanity, and 
that there may be no way 
to manage 
the climate risk of 
either the food industry 
or the world at large 
other than by replacing 
livestock products 
with better alternatives.”   
Apart from mitigating 
greenhouse gas emissions, 
the distinguished authors 
also offered compelling 
business incentives 
to embrace 
plant-based proteins.
“By replacing livestock 
products with analogs, 
consumers can take 
a single powerful action 
collectively to mitigate 
most greenhouse gases 
worldwide. 
Labeling analogs 
with certified claims 
of the amount of 
greenhouse gases averted 
can give them 
a significant edge. 
Analogs are 
less expensive, 
less wasteful, 
easier to cook,
and healthier 
than livestock products.
Action to replace 
livestock products…
can also reverse 
the ongoing world 
food and water crises.
…It has been predicted from 
within both the livestock 
and financial sectors 
that peak oil could 
bring about the collapse 
of the livestock sector 
within a few years. 
To be ahead 
of the competition
in that scenario is 
another reason for leaders 
in the food industry 
to begin replacing 
livestock products
with better alternatives 
immediately.
Analog projects would be 
more labor intensive 
than livestock projects, 
so would create 
both more jobs 
and more skilled jobs. 
They would also avert 
the harmful 
labor practices found in 
the livestock sector (but 
not in analog production), 
including slave labor 
in some areas such as 
the Amazon forest region. 
New Perspectives
In a doctoral dissertation 
praised by academia 
and discussed 
with much interest by 
the media and the public, 
economist Markus Vinnari 
studied the future prospects 
for meat eating 
and vegetarianism 
in Western society. 
Part of his study explains 
an alternative view 
on the environment 
that would make 
a plant-based diet 
the constructive choice. 
“This platform includes 
normative claims 
about humans 
and their relationship 
with the environment. 
These eight points 
are the following:
1. The well-being and 
flourishing of human and 
nonhuman life on Earth 
have value in themselves 
(synonyms: intrinsic value,
inherent worth). 
These values 
are independent 
of the usefulness 
of the nonhuman world 
for human purposes. 
This principle states
that not only 
anthropocentric
interests are relevant.
Hence 
when making decisions 
the end result 
of their effects on 
other animals and nature 
should be evaluated. 
This is because there is 
good evidence available 
of the environmental 
consequences 
of meat eating and 
strong arguments in favor 
of giving intrinsic values 
to production animals. 
Adhering to this principle 
would lead 
to vegetarianism.
2. The richness and 
diversity of life-forms 
contribute to the realization
of these values 
and are also values 
in themselves. …
3. Humans have no right 
to reduce this richness 
and diversity except 
to satisfy vital needs.
This principle states 
that humans should 
limit their influence 
on natural systems 
and that humans should 
eat foods that are located 
on a lower level 
in the food chain as 
their influence grows and 
as they consume products 
from higher levels 
in the food chain. 
As there is more and more 
evidence, for example, 
about climate change, 
it is obvious that 
humankind is taking risks 
by continuing 
its excessive overuse 
of natural resources 
and that this may have 
calamitous consequences.
The food production sector 
has been dominated 
by growth and 
efficiency goals
for the last decades 
and farm sizes 
and production amounts 
have grown 
at ever growing rates. 
Some notions exist 
that this could be 
slowly changing and that 
examples of such change 
would include 
the growing interest 
in organic foods.
As there are possibilities 
that humankind and 
all other life will be faced 
with catastrophes in 
the form of climate change 
caused by 
environmental degradation 
and as the number 
of animals slaughtered 
in the agricultural sector 
are staggering, 
action needs to be taken 
to avoid catastrophic
consequences. 
The use of more efficient 
forms of food production, 
i.e. not meat, would help 
avoid such environmental 
degradation.”
On June 2, 
a new United Nations-
sponsored report, 
released to coincide with 
World Environment Day, 
stirred 
immediate attention 
among mainstream media. 
It stated that 
a global shift away 
from animal products 
is necessary to avoid the 
worst of climate change.
Journalist Alister Doyle 
for Reuters was one of 
the first to report 
on this study 
by the United Nations 
Environment Program’s 
(UNEP) 
International Panel
for Sustainable Resource 
Management, 
to be presented 
to world governments.
OSLO, June 2 (Reuters) – 
An overhaul 
of world farming 
and more vegetarianism 
should be top priorities to 
protect the environment, 
along with curbs 
on fossil fuel use, 
a U.N.-backed study 
said on Wednesday.
"Agricultural production 
accounts for a staggering 
70 percent of the global 
freshwater consumption, 
38 percent of 
the total land use.”
said Achim Steiner, 
head of the U.N. 
Environment Programme.
The report said 
consumers could help 
by cutting down 
on meat consumption 
and use of fossil fuels 
in heating or travel. 
"Animal products 
are important because 
more than half of 
the world's crops are used 
to feed animals, 
not people," it said.
"A substantial reduction 
of impacts would 
only be possible with 
a substantial worldwide 
diet change, away from 
animal products."
We thank all 
the dedicated scientists, 
researchers and journalists
involved in studying 
and communicating
the environmental benefits 
of the meat-free way 
so we may take 
the wisest course of action.
May the world’s leaders, 
media, food producers 
and consumers 
work together 
to save our planet.
Thank you 
for your presence 
on today’s program 
in observance of 
World Environment Day. 
Please now join us 
for Words of Wisdom, 
up next 
after Noteworthy News, 
here on 
Supreme Master Television. 
May Heaven bless us 
with abundant love 
and courage.
The articles 
from today’s program 
can be read in full 
free-of-charge, at 
(click on Resources) or 
in the following websites:
Ms. Ghazaleh Lotfi 
and Dr. Ramin Zafari 
are the devoted 
“parents” of the 
Forough e Mohabbat 
Charity Institute, 
a loving home 
for disadvantaged child.
One of my biggest dreams 
is to form a “Forough 
e Mohabbat village,” 
where children can work 
together, live together; 
build their own families, 
and generally 
live together 
without any intrusion. 
They were honored 
with the Shining World 
Compassion Award 
along with 
a US$10,000 contribution 
from Supreme Master 
Ching Hai.
Master Ching Hai, 
we are grateful; 
since today, with the help 
of your kind donation, 
Forough e Mohabbat 
Children Institute 
has officially commenced 
its operation.
We have one sentence 
to repay 
your loving attention: 
Ms. Ching Hai, 
we love you.
Join us Saturday, 
June 12, on 
Supreme Master Television.