- [Announcer] According to
experts, 2019 will be the year
that veganism goes mainstream.
Demand for vegan food is
driving restaurant chains
to adopt more meat and dairy-free options.
Oat milk is becoming a coffee shop staple.
Celebrities are going
vegan in record numbers,
and a quarter of Americans
between the age of 25 and 34
now identify as vegan or vegetarian.
Here are five compelling reasons
to make the shift to a vegan diet.
Number one, why eat
one, and not the other?
Have you ever asked yourself
if pets and farm animals
are really that different?
North America is a
nation of animal lovers.
85 million US households
have at least one pet.
A number that has more than
doubled in the past 30 years.
When it comes to our dinner plates,
the USDA notes that Americans
consume up to 220 pounds
of red meat and poultry
per person, per year.
But why do we eat cows,
chickens, pigs, and turkeys,
and not a dog or cat?
It turns out, dogs and farm animals
aren't all that different.
Cows are social animals,
and they love to play just like dogs.
They love physical contact too.
Chin scratches, shoulder
rubs, and belly rubs.
Pigs are also like dogs.
They can learn tricks.
Can your dog play video games?
Pigs can.
- [Announcer] He's amazed
animal psychologists
by learning a computer game
designed for chimpanzees.
- [Instructor] Chickens form
complex social structures,
and have 24 distinct
vocalizations to communicate.
They're highly intelligent birds,
and can recognize 100
different human faces.
Animals also have the capacity
to suffer, just like humans.
Farmers have admitted that
when their babies are taken from them,
dairy cows cry for days on end.
Animal biologist Daniel Weary
told Wired that calves grieve too.
He said, "Sometimes you'll see a decline
"in their willingness to eat food."
Neuroscientist and founder of
the Kimmela Center for Animal Advocacy,
Doctor Lori Marino says that farm animals
are sentient and capable of suffering.
"Pigs have self awareness,"
she says, "self agency,
"and have a sense of themselves
"within the social community."
Farm animals know what they are in for
when they enter the slaughterhouse.
And there is no nice or humane way
to kill a being that does not want to die.
Australian philanthropist,
Philip Wollen says,
- I discovered that when we
suffer, we suffer as equals.
And in their capacity to suffer,
a dog
is a pig
is a bear
is a boy.
- [Instructor] Number
two, environmental impact.
Eating animals is
destroying the environment.
As most cultures across the globe
have embraced a meat-eating lifestyle,
the impact of meat consumption
is the biggest threat to our planet.
Animal agriculture is
responsible for deforestation,
as forests are clear cut to
pasture animals and grow feed.
In the past 50 years, about 17%
of the Amazon Rainforest
has been destroyed,
and it is in large part
due to cattle ranching.
According to National Geographic,
80% of the world's
animals live in forests,
and deforestation has put
animals such as orangutans
and Sumatran tigers on the
endangered species list,
displacing them from their homes
and jeopardizing their immediate future.
Meat production is also
affecting marine ecosystems.
Animal waste and runoff can
seep into our water supply.
According to the Natural
Resources Defense Council,
animal waste can create algal blooms.
This phenomenon creates what
is known as an ocean dead zone,
as the algal blooms sucks up
all of the oxygen out of the water.
These areas do not support aquatic life,
and fish have to swim farther
out to sea to survive.
The ocean dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico
was first discovered in the 1950s,
and measured only 15 square miles by 1988.
Today it covers 6,000
to 7,000 square miles,
and is largely attributed
to fertilizer use,
animal waste, and other
man-made pollutants.
Animal agriculture is a leading
cause of climate change,
and it is endangering the
home of future generations.
Number three, ending world hunger.
Ditching animal products
could eradicate the suffering
of millions of people around the world,
struggling with a lack of food.
If you care about other humans,
it is important to
consider your food choices.
- [Narrator] On a planet that
grows sufficient food for all,
a billion people go hungry.
Another billion over-consume,
increasing risks of chronic diseases.
- [Instructor] A large number of resources
go into producing a burger.
Pounds of soy and corn that
a cow eats before slaughter
could be fed to humans instead.
The land used to grow these crops
could be diversified to grow
other nutrient-rich foods
for humans to consume.
We can eliminate the middle man
and get our nutrients
straight from the source,
rather than filtering it
through an animal's body.
The UN predicts that the global population
will reach 9.8 billion by 2050,
which will put further
strain on our food system.
A global food supply analysis,
conducted by researchers
at Lancaster University,
has found that we can feed
this growing population
if there is radical societal adaptation.
We currently grow enough
edible crops worldwide
to feed 9.8 billion people.
So a shift to a plant-based diet
would provide enough healthful food,
and is a sustainable
solution to the food crisis.
It could help relieve the
suffering of tens of millions.
Number four, the reality
of animal agriculture.
The animal agriculture
industry is a dirty business.
Its issues are systemic,
and affect the lives of
slaughterhouse workers,
farmers, and animals.
The industry employs around
700,000 workers in the United States,
typically migrant workers
from Latin America.
Many are forced to work
in unsafe conditions
without proper contracts.
Simply wanting to provide
for their families,
many fall into this line of
work with nowhere else to go.
Ted Genoways' book, "The
Chain," touches on these issues
at Hormel's slaughterhouses,
and notes that the poor immigrant workers
are treated only marginally
better than the pigs they kill.
Product demand is high in the business,
and corporations want to make money.
Healthy workers are faced
with unrealistic expectations
that jeopardizes their safety,
such as cutting meat
faster to meet quotas.
Workers who get injured
are often harassed.
Slaughterhouse lines are dangerous,
and conditions are unsanitary,
exposing workers to illness and disease.
Due to the violence that
slaughterhouse workers
must inflict on a daily basis,
many can develop psychological
disorders, such as PTSD.
Animals suffer at the
hand of violence as well.
Slaughtering processes are rapid,
and procedures such as
stunning are often ineffective.
Countless animals are
subjected to scalding tanks,
or having their throat
slit and bodies dismembered
while fully conscious.
Many farmers are second
or third generation,
and have had these businesses
passed down to them.
For some, raising animals
may seem like the most
viable career option.
President of Mercy for
Animals, Leah Garces, explains.
- These farmers come into
this, very young quite often.
They take out massive loans,
and the only way to pay that
debt off is to raise chickens.
You get one sick flock,
you miss a payment.
And that payment, and that loan
is linked to your property, and your land.
Meaning, if you mess up, you are homeless.
- [Instructor] Like migrant workers,
farmers are simply
trying to make ends meet.
Number five, moral compass.
Could you kill?
Animal rights activist Earthling Ed
asks the important question.
- It made me say to myself,
"How do I morally justify
"doing these things to animals?"
Are my taste buds more
important than their life?
- [Instructor] Short film
by animal rights group,
Last Chance for Animals, brings
this moral dilemma to light.
If you had to kill the animal
that becomes meat on your
plate, could you do it?
Face to face with a sentient being,
most of us would be unable to.
According to Peter Singer,
professor of bioethics
at Princeton University,
and author of "Animal Liberation,"
widely regarded as the most
important book on veganism,
future generations will consider
meat eating to be barbaric.
Especially when there are other healthful
and delicious options available.
He said, "I think we'll
come to view eating meat
"in the way we now look
back on the Roman games.
"Having crowds of enthusiastic
people cheering on the lions
"as they slaughtered the Christians.
"Or gladiators fighting
each other to the death."
Studies have found that
adopting a vegan diet
can make you more compassionate
elsewhere in your life too.
When shown footage of an animal suffering,
vegetarians and vegans
had higher activation
in the part of the brain
that triggers empathy.
- If you were naturally
meant to eat animals,
not only would you be able
to watch them being killed,
you'd be able to kill them yourself.
Yet so many of us feel
the opposite of hunger
when we see animals being killed.
We feel repulsed.
- [Instructor] Conscious
eating leads to compassion
in other aspects of our lives,
as humans realize that we are not
more important than animals,
and that we are all equals
on this planet we share.
That's it for today.
What would make you go vegan?
Let us know in the comments.
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