Halo, esteemed viewers. 
Today, we’ll take a look 
at some of 
the most interesting and 
talked-about books on 
a matter that affects us all 
in a profound way: 
the diet-planet connection. 
The five fascinating 
individuals that authored 
or edited these books 
range from a celebrity 
musician to an advisor 
to the European Union 
to the former heir of a 
giant ice cream company. 
In compelling words 
excerpted here 
on our program, 
they ask us to dare to 
see things in new ways.
For his intriguing book, 
“Eating Animals,” 
award-winning US author 
Jonathan Safran Foer 
was invited to speak on 
The Ellen DeGeneres Show. 
His book also inspired 
Academy Award-
winning Hollywood 
actress Natalie Portman 
to write an article, titled 
“Jonathan Safran Foer’s 
“Eating Animals” 
Turned Me Vegan.” 
Mr. Foer was motivated 
to explore the topic 
as a new father 
concerned about whether 
it was right to feed meat 
to his son. 
The following is an 
excerpt from the book’s 
profound discussions 
about meat eating 
and environmentalism. 
“In other words, 
if one cares about 
the environment, 
and if one accepts 
the scientific results of 
such sources 
as the UN (or the 
Intergovernmetnal Panel 
on Climate Change,
or the Center for Science 
in the Public Interest, or 
the Pew Commission, 
or the Union of 
Concerned Scientists, 
or the Worldwatch 
Institute…), 
one must care about 
eating animals…
Virtually everyone agrees 
that animals can suffer 
in ways that matter, 
even if we don’t agree on 
just what that suffering 
is like or 
how important it is… 
Another thing most people 
agree on is that 
the environment matters. 
Whether or not 
you are in favor of 
offshore oil drilling, 
whether or not 
you “believe” in 
global warming, whether 
you defend your Hummer 
or live off the grid, 
you recognize that 
the air you breathe and 
the water you drink 
are important. 
And that 
they will be important 
to your children 
and grandchildren. 
Even those who continue 
to deny that 
the environment is in peril 
would agree that 
it would be bad if it were.
“In the United States, 
farmed animals represent 
more than 99 percent of 
all animals with whom 
humans directly interact. 
In terms of our effect 
on the “animal world” – 
whether it’s the suffering 
of animals or 
issues of biodiversity and 
the interdependence of 
species that evolution 
spent millions of years 
bringing into 
this livable balance – 
nothing comes close 
to having the impact of 
our dietary choices. 
Just as nothing we do 
has the direct potential 
to cause nearly 
as much animal suffering 
as eating meat, 
no daily choice 
that we make 
has a greater impact 
on the environment.”
In 2010, multi-platinum 
international musician 
and singer-songwriter 
Moby published 
a new book on a topic 
unrelated to music 
but nevertheless 
close to his heart. 
“Gristle: 
From Factory Farms 
to Food Safety 
(Thinking Twice About 
the Meat We Eat).”
The main message is for 
people to be more aware 
of the ramifications of 
animal production, 
specifically 
animal production 
on factory farms. 
We’re just sort of 
presenting the facts and 
hopefully letting people 
make up their own minds.
“Gristle” is a concise yet 
thorough presentation of 
the far-reaching impacts 
of animal consumption 
on adult and children’s 
health, as well as the tolls 
to animal welfare, 
the environment, 
taxpayer costs, 
animal industry workers 
and communities, 
global hunger, and 
animal-borne disease.
In addition to providing 
his own writing, Moby 
has edited pieces by 15 
notable policymakers, 
food business leaders, 
vegetarians, and activists, 
including Ms.
Ms. Frances Moore Lappé, 
Mr. Wayne Pacelle, 
Mr. Brendan Brazier, and 
Ms. Christine Chavez. 
The following are 
excerpts from Moby’s 
easy-to-read fact-filled 
book’s Chapter 5 
on climate change, 
contributed by US 
climatologist and 
US-based Worldwatch 
Institute senior researcher 
Danielle Nierenberg 
and Meredith Niles 
from the Center 
for Food Safety.
“Animal agriculture, 
including billions of pigs, 
chickens, and cattle 
raised with 
industrial-style methods, 
contributes more than 
one-third of all annual 
methane emissions, with 
the rest coming from 
landfills, rice cultivation, 
and other natural sources. 
While individual cows 
don’t emit that much 
methane – just about 
80 to 110 kilograms 
each year – 
the more than 1 billion 
ruminant animals 
worldwide produce 
untenable amounts of 
methane during 
enteric fermentation, 
the digestive process that 
breaks down food in 
their multiple stomachs. 
In fact, ruminant animals 
produce 86 million 
metric tons of methane 
worldwide.”
“Animals raised in 
industrialized operations
…are fed a diet 
consisting mainly of corn 
and soybeans that require 
massive amounts of 
pesticides, herbicides, 
and particularly, 
artificial fertilizers. 
Indeed, fertilizer 
production for feed crops 
alone contributes some 
41 million tons of carbon 
dioxide (CO2) annually – 
the equivalent of that 
produced by nearly 
7 million cars.”
“Animals raised for meat, 
eggs, and milk also 
generate significant 
amounts of nitrous oxide 
through their manure. 
A 10 percent rise in 
nitrous oxide emissions 
in the United States 
between 1990 and 2005 
has been traced, at least 
partly to changes 
in the poultry industry, 
including an increase in 
the population of birds 
raised for meat and eggs.”
“Heating and cooling 
the massive confinement 
operations that dot 
the US landscape – 
and increasingly parts of 
Asia, Latin America, 
and the Caribbean – also 
results in several million 
tons of CO2 emissions.”
Eloquent lecturer, music 
composer and author, 
Dr. Will Tuttle, is known 
for his #1 bestselling book, 
“The World Peace Diet: 
Eating for 
Spiritual Health and 
Social Harmony.”
John Mackey, 
co-founder and CEO of 
Whole Foods Market, 
who is also a known 
meat-free advocate, read 
Dr. Tuttle’s book and 
commented: 
“I am grateful for this 
powerful and cogent book. 
It has stretched my 
thinking (and heart) about 
animals, compassion, 
and our society and will 
probably be catalytic 
in furthering 
my personal growth.”
Now, let’s read 
an excerpt from 
the eye-opening book, 
“The World Peace Diet: 
Eating for 
Spiritual Health and 
Social Harmony.”
“It would not be possible 
for us to eat 
the high quantities of 
inexpensive animal foods 
that we do today without 
a massive infusion of 
fossil fuels into our food 
production system…
The collision of soaring 
demand for fossil fuels 
with their permanently 
diminishing availability 
will cause unremitting 
upward price pressure 
as demands continue to 
expand and conflicts 
over limited oil escalate. 
With the coming 
unavoidable decline in 
fossil fuel availability, 
the days of cheap animal 
foods are numbered.”
“…Poisoning the earth 
with massive doses 
of toxic chemicals 
and petroleum-based 
fertilizers is 
highly profitable 
for the petroleum and 
chemical industries. 
These toxins cause 
cancer, which is 
highly profitable to the 
chemical-pharmaceutical-
medical complex. 
While the world’s 
rich omnivores waste 
precious supplies of 
grain, petroleum, water, 
and land feeding and 
eating fattened animals, 
the world’s poor 
have little grain to eat or 
clean water to drink, and 
their chronic hunger, 
thirst, and misery 
create conditions 
for war, terrorism, and 
drug addiction, which are 
extremely profitable 
industries as well. 
The richest fifth of 
the world’s population 
gets obesity, heart disease, 
and diabetes, also highly 
profitable for industry. 
The transnational 
corporations profit from 
animal food consumption, 
as do the big banks, 
which have made 
the loans that have built 
the whole complex and 
demand a healthy return 
on their investments. 
The system spreads 
relentlessly and globally, 
and while corporate 
and bank returns 
may be healthy, 
people, animals, and 
ecosystems throughout 
the world fall ill and are 
exploited and destroyed.”
John Robbins is an 
author widely recognized 
as one of the world’s 
leading experts on 
the close links between 
diet and environmental 
and personal health. 
He is the author of 
the revolutionary book 
“Diet for a New America,” 
which was nominated 
for a Pulitzer Prize, 
as well as the updated 
“The Food Revolution” 
and “Healthy at 100.” 
John Robbins was 
the only son of 
the co-founder of 
the Baskin-Robbins 
ice cream company, 
which he decided to 
relinquish in pursuit of 
a deeper dream of peace, 
harmony, and health. 
The following is 
an excerpt from 
Mr. Robbins’ 
acclaimed book, 
“The Food Revolution.”
“What We Know: World’s 
mammalian species 
currently threatened with 
extinction: 25 percent.
Leading cause of species 
in the tropical rainforests 
being threatened 
or eliminated: 
Livestock grazing.
Leading cause of species 
in the United States being 
threatened or eliminated: 
Livestock grazing.
Today, cattle and 
other ruminant animals 
(such as sheep and goats) 
graze an astounding half 
the planet’s total land area. 
As vast reaches of 
the American West 
have been given over to 
cattle grazing, wildlife 
has paid a terrible price. 
Pronghorn sheep 
have decreased from 
15 million a century ago 
to less than 271,000 
today. 
Bighorn sheep, 
once numbering over 
2 million, are now 
less than 20,000. 
The elk population has 
likewise plummeted. 
Tens of thousands of 
wild horses and burros 
have been rounded up 
because they competed 
with cattle, many ending 
up in slaughterhouses. 
Meanwhile, 
cattle ranchers have 
sought to block the 
reintroduction of wolves 
into the wild, despite 
the fact that it’s required 
by the Endangered 
Species Act.
…today’s unprecedented 
extinction rate 
is estimated 
by some biologists to be 
1,000 to 10,000 times 
higher than existed 
in prehistoric times.
…When the Union of 
Concerned Scientists 
analyzed the 
environmental impact 
of human activities, 
they concluded that 
the damage to wildlife 
habitat from producing 
1 pound of beef is 
20 times greater than 
that from producing 
1 pound of pasta.
A cultural shift toward 
a plant-based diet would 
save many of the species 
that are currently 
endangered and threatened. 
It would be a statement 
that we no longer 
hold ourselves above 
the rest of Creation, 
with the right to do 
to other life forms 
anything we might want, 
including extinguish 
their very existence. 
It would be a statement 
that we are ready to 
accept with humility 
and honor our role in 
preserving and protecting 
other species, rather than 
playing the conqueror 
and ending up ourselves 
destroyed.”
The messages 
in these books are full of 
empathy, concern, wisdom, 
and important truths 
about the grave state 
of our planet as well as 
the survival of our own 
and other species. 
Supreme Master Ching Hai 
has frequently 
urged humankind 
to be informed 
and act immediately 
to save the Earth. 
The following was 
one occasion during 
a November 2010 
video message 
at a climate change 
conference in London, 
United Kingdom.
So please consider 
what is really at stake now, 
what is really our 
foremost-urgent priority 
at the present time. 
It’s not just political 
reputation or economy. 
It’s the lives, real lives, 
of all inhabitants on Earth; 
humans, animals, 
plants, trees, etc.
An organic vegan diet 
would immensely 
improve the quality of 
our lives, spiritually also.
It can curb the water 
and food crises 
and restore nature’s 
life-support systems. 
It also happens 
to be the most rapid, 
cost-effective, 
and the only feasible 
climate solution, 
one that every nation 
can easily implement. 
In sum, only with the 
organic vegan solution 
can we still 
save our planet.
Respected and honorable 
ladies and gentlemen, 
I beseech you and 
all the leaders, to please, 
help our world, 
please save our planet.
Thank you 
conscientious viewers 
for joining us today. 
Now, please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television
for Words of Wisdom, 
after Noteworthy News. 
May our future world be 
bright, clean, and kind.
The books featured 
on today’s program 
are all available at 
www.Amazon.com 
as well as these 
other websites:
Jonathan Safran Foer’s
Eating Animals
www.EatingAnimals.com
www.Amazon.com
Moby’s
Gristle: From Factory 
Farming to Food Safety
www.Gristle-Book.com 
www.Amazon.com
Dr. Will Tuttle’s 
The World Peace Diet: 
Eating for 
Spiritual Health and 
Social Harmony
www.WorldPeaceDiet.org
www.Amazon.com
John Robbins’
The Food Revolution
www.FoodRevolution.org 
www.Amazon.com