Today’s 
Enlightening Entertainment 
will be presented 
in Finnish and English, 
with subtitles in Arabic, 
Aulacese (Vietnamese), 
Chinese, English, 
Finnish, French, 
German, Indonesian, 
Italian, Japanese, 
Korean, Malay, 
Mongolian, Persian, 
Portuguese, Russian, 
Spanish and Thai.
“I am a vegetarian. 
I believe that the rest 
of society should be too, 
because I have not 
heard any sensible 
explanations as to why 
this should not be the case.”
Markus Vinnari, PhD
Finnish research 
scientist, vegetarian
Excerpt from 
“The Past, Present and 
Future of Eating Meat 
in Finland”  v
Welcome, 
intelligent viewers, 
to our program today. 
As the tragic effects of 
climate change continue 
to threaten the existence 
of the billions of lives 
on planet Earth, scientists 
from all disciplines 
have made tremendous 
contributions to propagate 
the urgent message 
to halt global warming. 
When it will happen, 
nobody knows, 
but eventually 
the human race will 
either demolish itself – 
we will not be living 
on this planet anymore – 
or then there is 
the possibility that 
we become vegetarians, 
we change our 
perspective of  nature 
and other animals, 
and we will survive.
The whole point 
of my thesis was that 
this is possible. 
With meat consumption 
identified as being 
the leading cause of 
climate change and a host 
of other environmental 
and health problems, 
concerned experts 
have joined the mission 
to outline institutional 
foundations needed 
at the societal level 
to maintain a sustainable 
planetary home.    
One of the pioneer 
researchers in this respect 
is the Finnish 
economic sociologist 
Dr. Markus Vinnari, 
a researcher 
at the Turku School of 
Economics’ Finland 
Futures Research Centre, 
housed in 
the University of Turku 
in Tampere, Finland.
In March 2010, 
Dr. Vinnari presented 
a doctoral dissertation 
entitled, “The Past, 
Present and Future of 
Eating Meat in Finland.” 
This is the first doctorate 
level research that 
provides social 
and economic analysis 
pointing towards 
a vegetarian and vegan 
human society 
in the next 50 years. 
I have been interested in 
vegetarianism 
for quite a long time. 
One of the reasons why 
I continued to go to 
education in 
the Technical University 
in Tampere, was that 
I was interested in the 
environmental impacts 
that meat eating has. 
And I went there in order 
to find out how much 
pollution actually 
meat eating produces. 
And over there the 
evidence is quite strong. 
And if you look at 
the philosophical points, 
those are 
the philosophers have 
been doing their work 
for quite a long time and 
that’s the strongest base. 
And then when you look 
at the arguments that 
why you should eat meat 
those are actually quite 
weak; you can’t make 
any sense out of those.
Praised by academia 
and discussed 
with much interest by 
the media and the public, 
economist Dr. 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.
There is global warming 
that is a mega-trend, that 
is going to affect us all, 
and in the longer term 
we are probably going to 
handle that somehow. 
Or the other option 
isn’t very likeable. 
There is also 
water shortage, 
we need to change 
our agricultural system 
somehow, and one 
really big aspect of that 
is that what are the 
end users going to use? 
Are they going to use 
meat products that are 
going to need a lot of 
resources or 
vegetarian products 
which don’t need 
as much resources. 
So basically when 
these larger changes 
that are needed 
are understood, then 
we can start looking at 
the picture, that are there 
some factors that 
are already happening? 
And when you look at it, 
you start to notice that 
okay there is actually 
quite a lot happening here. 
In his thesis, scientist 
Dr. Markus Vinnari 
explained that three 
concepts were examined 
to formulate 
the research process: 
Deep Ecology, 
Deep Vegetarianism and 
Ecological Modernization.
He wrote: 
“The Deep Ecological 
principle states that 
the human perspective 
towards nature and 
animals should change 
towards one which sees 
animals and nature as 
having value inherently 
and not being valuable 
only as material resources 
or by the wellbeing 
they provide to humans. 
Deep Vegetarianism 
argues that humans have 
the moral duty 
to become vegetarians…
According to Ecological 
Modernization theory 
advancements 
in human capabilities, 
that act as a driver for 
technological development 
can be seen as answers to 
environmental problems.”
Excerpt from “The Past, 
Present and Future of 
Eating Meat in Finland”
Some people are really 
interested on the 
environmental aspects 
of it, for example, 
the greenhouse gas 
emissions are something 
that is almost daily 
in the news these days; 
and people are becoming 
more and more aware of 
the fact that methane is 
a really dangerous 
greenhouse gas and 
they are changing their 
behavior because of that. 
Some people are really 
keen onto the ethical 
issues, and in my opinion 
that’s the strongest 
argument that there is. 
And of course, there are 
the health arguments. 
Dr. Vinnari 
firmly believes that 
basic information 
on the benefits of 
the plant-based diet needs 
to be distributed to the 
general public in order to 
dispel the many myths 
claimed by the meat 
and dairy industry. 
Through 
increased understanding, 
a quick change towards 
the adoption of 
a vegetarian diet can 
occur in the enlightened 
population.   
In Finland, when you 
go to the doctor’s office 
when you have a baby, 
they hand out papers 
that are printed 
by the food industry. 
So I was shocked actually 
that this happens even 
in Finland, that there is 
material put out by the 
food industry over there, 
and of course, it says that 
you need to drink milk. 
It doesn’t say that 
you need vitamin D, 
it says you need to 
drink to milk. 
When I started to be 
a vegetarian 
more than ten years ago, 
nobody actually knew 
what it meant. 
And they were quite sure 
that okay, you are not 
going to have enough 
nutrition and you are
not going to survive. 
Now, that you go to 
the university, quite a few 
of the ladies are actually 
vegetarians. 
And this is something 
that has happened 
quite quickly and 
nobody questions the fact 
that actually 
you couldn’t survive. 
In addition, 
through numerous 
animal cognition studies 
and the testimonies 
animal telepathic 
communicators, 
the vastly undiscovered 
realm of 
animal intelligence 
is being revealed. 
Dr. Markus Vinnari’s 
study makes the case that 
all life has its own value. 
“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.”
Excerpt from “The Past, 
Present and Future of 
Eating Meat in Finland”
For example, I’ve been 
quite a lot of involved 
with animal welfare 
researchers and 
over there it’s not even 
allowed to say that 
some animal is sad, 
because there is this idea 
that the animals are 
so different from us, 
even though Darwin said 
quite a few years ago that 
actually animals and 
humans are quite similar, 
there isn’t that big 
of a difference.
It’s happened 
just during a few years 
and now that I speak to 
those researchers 
they’re saying that, 
“Okay, the animals are 
actually experiencing the 
same things and they are, 
have the same feeling 
as we do.” 
But now we are just 
in the beginning of being 
able to say that out loud, 
we are able to write that 
in a journal article.
In his dissertation, 
“The Past, Present and 
Future of Eating Meat 
in Finland,” 
Dr. Vinnari delves into 
the historical roots 
of vegetarianism and 
outlines the necessity 
for human society to 
return to a plant-based 
diet society. 
How we, the world, 
could become vegetarian 
during the next 50 years, 
and one of the ways that 
I saw that it could 
happen was that
there is some crisis, 
a global crisis, that 
people get aware of,
that okay, we did it, 
this is our fault what 
should we do about it? 
And that’s of course 
one possibility that 
if there is such 
a global crisis, which is 
severe enough, then 
there is going to be 
large implications, to our 
consumption practices. 
We need to think about 
the technical aspects of it, 
we need to think about 
the social aspects of it, 
we need to think about 
the political aspects of it. 
All little advancements 
are needed in these 
different areas, and we 
don’t know at what point 
it will start to go 
automatically. 
There needs to be 
more research on 
the health effects 
of vegetarianism. 
How to build up 
a really healthy 
vegetarian food circle; 
that’s something that is 
really important, because 
that information needs to 
get into the school system. 
That is information 
that needs to get into 
the nursery system, 
and to the mothers 
of little children, 
that’s something that 
is quite important, 
that people don’t 
have any fears.  
“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.”
Excerpt from “The Past, 
Present and Future of 
Eating Meat in Finland”
Meat-free Days that 
have been adopted 
around the world best 
exemplify the hopeful 
beginnings for society’s 
transformation 
to a new paradigm 
of sustainable 
food consumption. 
I was enormously happy 
when the idea that 
once a week they offer 
vegetarian food 
in the school system 
went through. 
It’s not only that 
the children get a taste of 
vegetarian food but it 
also makes the cooks who 
are making the food 
think about what 
they are making, and they 
are starting little by little 
to think about how to get 
real nutritional values 
into those foods. 
And even though it’s just 
one day a week, it means 
that the whole food 
acquiring system 
needs to tackle that. 
There needs to be 
better cooks, they need to 
know how to make 
vegetarian food, then 
there needs to be a shop 
that sells them 
these products, and when 
they sell these products 
to these schools 
these products will 
probably become more 
cheaper and cheaper. 
So basically then 
the children can go home 
and tell their parents that 
I ate this really good 
vegetarian food at school. 
And as those foods 
become cheaper, 
those parents are 
more probable to buy 
those products. 
So it’s a really, really big 
change when you start to 
think it in that respect. 
And these are 
the type of things that 
needs to happen. 
In the same way, 
if you are vegetarian, ask 
your friends to come over 
and teach them, 
just say taste this and 
how does it taste? 
Tomorrow 
ask your neighbor or 
your friend or somebody 
that you haven't offered a 
vegetarian dinner before, 
to come and eat with you, 
and offer them something 
really nice that they 
would actually like.  
And perhaps they are 
going to make vegetarian 
food tomorrow and 
that always means that 
there is less suffering 
in the world. 
Expressing 
his enduring optimism 
for the vegetarian future 
of Finland and our world, 
Dr. Vinnari articulated: 
“I hope and believe that 
the direction in which 
societies are developing 
can be a preferable one. 
By this I mean that 
the diffusion of scientific 
knowledge in societies 
can help humans 
to understand 
their prehistoric roots 
and their position 
in the social, political 
and cultural systems 
that we live in. 
I hope this is true because 
the other direction, 
the one in which we see 
animals and nature 
only as resources, 
does not engender 
great prospects for 
sustaining life on earth.” 
Excerpt from “The Past, 
Present and Future of 
Eating Meat in Finland”
Dr. Markus Vinnari, 
we appreciate and share 
your noble vision 
for a vegan world 
in which all beings 
co-exist peacefully 
on our beautiful, 
sustainable planet. 
May your beneficial 
work continue to be met 
with success for 
the greater good of 
all Earth’s inhabitants. 
Be Veg, 
Go Green 
2 Save the Planet!   
Thank you, 
thoughtful viewers, 
for joining us 
for today’s program. 
Please stay tuned to 
Supreme Master 
Television 
for Words of Wisdom, 
coming up next 
after Noteworthy News. 
Blessed be all virtuous 
hearts who adopt 
the loving and dignified 
animal-free lifestyle. 
Dr. Markus Vinnari’s 
work,
“The Past, Present and 
Future of Eating Meat
in Finland,” 
can be freely accessed at:  
search word