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The End of Meat | How Meat Affects Our Health & The Environment | Vegan | FULL DOCUMENTARY
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♪♪
[announcer] There's beef.
There's pork and ham.
There's lamb.
Meat and eggs help the body grow and make it strong.
[audio slows, stops] Meat is good for you...
[man] It was just like... meat, meat, meat, meat and meat and more meat.
And man, they like meat!
[man 2] It was like nonstop.
E. coli, salmonella, people getting sick,
and I'm sure some people died from it.
[newswoman] Eating processed meat can cause cancer.
[man over phone] We can assure consumers that our beef is safe.
[newswoman] Rats, foxes, even minks
are being fraudulently sold as beef or mutton.
[newsman] Meat consumption is rising
in many countries despite warnings.
[man] This is the big elephant in the room that nobody's talking about.
[man 2] It's very tasty.
[newswoman] Livestock contributes more to climate change than cars.
[newsman] 1.8 million hectares of the Amazon are cut down each year,
75% attributed to the expansion of cattle ranches.
[newsman] Perhaps one of the most shocking things about factory farms
is that there's almost no one watching them.
[woman] Is this a sort of a cultural war right now?
♪
[male narrator] Meat.
For most of us, it was and is
an integral part of the diet.
But recently, meat has lost its mythical status.
Once a symbol of prosperity and power,
meat consumption has become problematic,
for the planet and for ourselves.
Eating a steak or a burger is no longer a luxury,
and we've gotten more and more disconnected
from where our meat actually comes from.
Meat-free diets are a growing trend in Western countries.
Although this is not a new idea,
plant-based diets are becoming increasingly popular in Germany.
This made me wonder what the world would look like
were we no longer eating animals.
And so I set out to connect with the pioneers
of the vegan revolution in Germany,
met with researchers
examining the effects of a plant-based diet,
traveled to the first vegetarian city in the world,
learned about the lives of rescued farm animals,
spoke with philosophers and lawyers
working to have animals' interests considered,
and talked to scientists
developing meat-free future foods.
But first, I wanted to learn more about the origins of meat
and our treatment of farmed animals.
[man] Well, first of all, I was raised being taught
that the domestication of other animals
was a great thing for humanity and a great thing for animals.
But then over time, I came to learn that actually it was a lie,
that other animals were captured, they were enslaved,
they were biologically manipulated.
I thought they were desecrated.
In my work, I refer to that practice as "domesecration."
Once the domesecration of other animals started,
men got on their backs and they began to go long distances,
they began to use other horses as instruments of warfare and violence,
raiding more sedentary peoples
and killing people, enslaving them.
So, for example, when the Europeans
invaded the Americas, they could only conduct that invasion
through the use of horses as instruments of war
and cows and pigs and sheep as laborers and as rations,
and they needed land to grow more animals,
to facilitate further invasion.
So the oppression of the other animals
was deeply entangled with the fates
of the indigenous peoples,
as the more land that they needed for ranching,
the more people were killed, their land was taken.
Once they cleared that land, then they developed railroads
and began to transport these animals back to cities
like Chicago and Cincinnati.
Large slaughterhouses begin to develop,
then marketing firms begin to develop,
and feed firms begin to develop,
and banks began to get their share of this,
and retail organizations begin growing
and then fast-food organizations crop up.
Then we see the formation
of this animal industrial complex.
There's a great political power, ideological power,
and economic power,
and they continue to drive
increased consumption,
all to garner profits for those in the industry.
So...
domesecration has been horrific for the world and other animals,
and it's time that we begin to stop that and change the course of world history.
[narrator] This is me at nine years old
meeting a cow for the first time.
And this is me about to eat a cow.
Back then, I had no idea where the meat on my plate came from,
and I wonder now why it took me so long
to start questioning what, or rather whom, I was eating.
[pigs snorting, squealing]
[woman] That's just the worst part of my job.
I got to come and go.
I got to go in and photograph and witness and experience
the horror and the pain, but I got to leave.
And they don't get to leave.
I can complain about, you know,
the smell on my clothes and the camera months later,
but, like, they're in it all the time, that's their life.
That is the only thing that they experience in life, this.
This is where they live and this is where they will die,
except for when they get put on a transport and go to slaughter.
Unbelievable.
But these things happen behind walls
in these dark, horrible, stinky places,
where no one's allowed to enter,
where we get put in jail, we get arrested,
we get charged if we enter these places.
There's a reason for that.
It's to protect the business
because the business would fail if we knew.
My way of effecting change, as well, is storytelling.
People remember emotions and stories
more often than they remember statistics,
and so I tell stories about the individuals I've met around the world.
Bears rescued from bear bile farms,
pigs rescued from factory farms.
Show the photos of Julia the pig, Sonny the calf,
and Miracle the bear.
You could hear a pin drop when I'm doing these talks,
and they're leaning forward in their chairs
and they're engaged and it's because it's storytelling.
And then they go off and they share these stories.
Um, so things are getting worse in some places,
but they're getting better in a lot of places as well.
We're seeing meat-eating growing in certain countries,
but we're seeing it decline in other countries.
We're seeing laws changing, very much so in Europe.
Better welfare laws and all sorts of "improvements,"
but then enforcement is a problem.
I've been to plenty of farms where the laws have changed
two, three years ago,
and the farmers haven't implemented anything
because the fine is less expensive
than having to reformat their entire farm.
[man] So I went undercover in an industrialized slaughterhouse
because I was interested in understanding
how massive processes of violence work
in what we call modern civilized society.
Slaughterhouses, for the most part,
are located far out of urban areas.
They're located in rural areas where the vast majority of urban consumers
will never have to confront what takes place inside of them.
They're also hidden socially.
We delegate the work of killing to a group of people
who have very little rights.
We also hide them linguistically, right?
Steers become steaks and heifers become hamburgers.
We hide places of violence.
We hide places of ugliness, so that we can continue to live
as if they didn't exist, while still relying
on their products in our everyday lives.
Two months into my fieldwork,
six cattle escaped from a slaughterhouse
up the street from the one that I was working in.
Three of them made an immediate run
for the parking lot of Saint Francis of Assisi Catholic Church.
These cows were captured and taken back to the slaughterhouse,
but one of the cows made a run down the main boulevard in Omaha
and then took a turn into an alleyway.
The escape took place during the afternoon break
for the slaughterhouse that I was working in,
and me and some of the other slaughterhouse workers
watched as the Omaha Police Department
pursued this cow into an alleyway
that ended in a chain-link fence bordering our slaughterhouse.
And when the police failed to herd her into a trailer,
they opened fire on her with shotguns and killed her.
And the next day, the newspaper in Omaha
featured this escape and killing on its front page,
under the headline "Freedom is fleeting for cattle in plant escape."
And in the lunchroom at the slaughterhouse,
the workers expressed a sense of disgust and outrage
at the killing of this one animal.
"They shot her just like they shot an unarmed man
from Mexico last year,"
Julio, one of the quality control workers said.
And then the lunch period ended,
and we all went back to our places on the kill floor
where we proceeded to kill another 1,250 animals
for the remainder of the day.
[narrator] Social media has radically changed the distribution of information.
Images and videos highlighting the plight of farm animals
are now reaching a global audience
that is increasingly seeking transparency and knowledge
surrounding the sourcing of their food.
A video by Toronto Pig Save activist Anita Krajnc made headlines worldwide
when she was charged for giving water to thirsty pigs
on a hot day outside a Toronto slaughterhouse.
Toronto Pig Save and the sister groups are about bearing witness.
And that is the idea that when there is injustice in your community,
you need to be present and be there and try to help.
And so, for animals, the darkest place is a slaughterhouse.
So Toronto Pig Save holds vigils outside slaughterhouses.
[woman] Here comes the truck!
[woman] I know, babies!
I love you.
♪
-[truck hydraulics hiss] -[pig squeals]
[pigs snorting]
[pigs snorting and squealing]
♪
[Anita] I think a lot of people felt hopeless before, saying,
"Oh, it's never going to change. People are not going to stop eating meat."
And then they see these people doing vigils saying, "This is wrong, stop this."
They find that very empowering and encouraging.
I think if more and more people bear witness firsthand,
it will change them, and they would not participate
in violence against these animals if they saw the animals firsthand.
I have no doubt about it.
[clattering]
[narrator] While in Toronto, I came across someone else
who was changing hearts and minds
and had a huge following on social media.
Her name is Esther the Wonder Pig.
One for you.
[man] The story behind Esther is interesting.
She was a very unplanned and last-minute addition to our family.
We were duped, you know.
We were under the impression that she was a mini pig.
And, you know, man, there's nothing mini about her.
[man 2] We'd fallen in love in a pretty crazy way.
The thought of getting rid of her was terrifying.
It was really, really upsetting.
I mean, we both knew in the back of our minds
that we were gonna be on one hell of a bumpy road.
We didn't know it was gonna be a 500-pound road.
Yeah, I mean, but we love all of her.
You know, she can put on 500 more pounds
and she's still welcome to do as she please.
You know, she's part of the family,
and it's not her fault she got that big.
We created the Facebook page
and it was just fun-loving photos of Esther,
and then we threw it out to our family and friends,
and within a day there was a hundred likes,
and we were just like, whoa, like a hundred.
The next day it was 300 and the next day it was 500,
1,000, 2,000, 8,000, it just started going like clockwork.
And it was at 8,000... 8,000 likes.
We woke up and our phones were maxed out.
Somebody in Hong Kong had sent us a text.
She said, "You guys are in Hong Kong's biggest newspaper."
It was that moment that I was like,
"Wow, like, what is going on?"
♪
[keyboard clacking]
You have this lightbulb moment.
We had a lightbulb moment when we were cooking bacon on the stove,
and Esther's five pounds at our feet,
waiting for something to fall off the stove,
and I was like, "Oh, my gosh," it just happened.
-It was like this bulb. -Can't do this.
Like, it just, it was a crazy moment,
and, um...
we never ate meat after that point.
[Steve] It's all her. It's all her.
She's got this amazing ability to get into your head.
That's what's happening all over,
you know, all around us, globally.
It's all over the world.
We hear from people all over the world.
Yeah, one of the most amazing signs of her intelligence
was, usually, she'd go into the kitchen
and she would open a door, try to pull food out,
and just cause chaos, so she got in trouble every time, obviously.
And a few weeks in, you'd walk into the kitchen,
you'd find a cupboard door open and nothing wrong.
What the hell is that? And you'd find a basket out on the floor,
and, what is going on, you know?
And we finally figured out one day that it was her going in.
She'd open the cupboard and then she'd leave the room
and leave it alone for a minute,
and then she'd go back again a second later
and she'd pull out whatever food she wanted,
but she'd leave it on the floor, and then she'd leave again.
Then the third time in, she would go into the kitchen,
grab the food and then run out of the kitchen,
down the hallway to the bedroom with whatever it was she stole.
Uh, and, I mean, in our minds it was her
breaking it down into individual steps and an individual process,
increasing her chances of success, right?
She was quiet. She'd come back in and--
[Derek] Check us out. Just to like, "Oh, it's normal, everything's fine."
Give you a false sense of security,
and then go back in and just chaos ensues.
[keyboard clacking]
As hard as it was, it's been the most rewarding
and, you know, amazing experience
I think we've ever had and probably ever will have.
Who gets to live with a pig like that
and have those experiences?
I mean, it was incredible, it was incredible.
[sizzling]
[woman] Over human history, meat became
this food for sharing and for celebrations.
This is why during festivities, usually in most cultures,
you have meat at the center, as a centerpiece.
You have the Thanksgiving turkey for example, in the United States.
Meat was always important in that way.
It became so ingrained in our traditions
in this kind of feeling of commonality,
of sharing with other people, that it's hard to let it go as well for that reason,
because if you say no to the Thanksgiving turkey,
it's also saying, in a way, no to your traditions, to your family, to your friends.
Definitely cultures change slowly.
You see the meat industry is putting a lot of marketing
and advertising and so on to keep up all this kind of symbolism
that meat has, it lives on, especially, for example, for masculinity.
[narrator] The land of bratwurst and schnitzel
is renowned for its heavy reliance on meat.
Germans eat an estimated 60 kilograms,
or roughly 132 pounds, of meat each, every year.
But scandals such as mad cow disease
and wrongfully labeled horse meat
have led to a loss of confidence in the industry.
Climate change, as well as the recurring images
of animal mistreatment in factory farms
led to a public debate about the animals on our plate,
and suddenly plant-based diets were a newly found interest.
Presented to a health-conscious audience,
vegan cookbooks that promised weight loss and wellness benefits
were popping up on best-seller lists,
attracting attention from mainstream media and beyond.
Plants are no longer a side dish
but the creative and healthy main course.
Numerous vegan restaurants have cropped up all over the country
and many more have added vegan options.
Supermarkets are stocking vegan products
and the number of vegan cookbooks
has grown exponentially,
from only 23 in 2012
to 220 in 2016.
With the highest number of vegan restaurants
and spearheaded by the world's first 100% vegan supermarket chain,
Berlin has become the vegan capital of Europe.
[wrappers crackling]
Mmm!
[narrator] I wondered how the vegan explosion in Germany
had impacted the largest producer of tofu and meat alternatives in Europe:
Tofutown, formerly called Viana.
[narrator] "The sausage is the cigarette of the future."
This quote by the CEO of Rugenwalder Muhle,
a traditional sausage producer in Germany,
caused a stir in the world of meat.
At the IFFA, the number one international trade fair for the meat industry,
I was hoping to find out if this was indeed where this sector was heading.
[narrator] We live during a time
where our impact on the planet has become so destructive
that, akin to other natural forces,
humanity has become a global geophysical force in itself.
Scientists call this period the Anthropocene,
the age of humans.
During our relatively short time on Earth,
we have made a mark on our climate, our land,
our air and our oceans.
It's a mark we continue making every day
and which will be felt for generations to come.
Each year we breed, raise and kill
56 billion farmed animals.
This system is responsible
for 18% of greenhouse gas emissions,
uses a third of all fresh water,
occupies 45% of the Earth's total land,
has destroyed 70% of the Amazon rain forest,
and has become the greatest threat to biodiversity.
And while 11% of the world's population suffers from malnutrition,
we feed half of the world's grain
to animals slated for slaughter.
So what would happen if meat disappeared from the planet?
How could the end of meat affect the planet, the animals,
and our own lives?
The global population is projected
to grow to nearly 10 billion people by 2050.
As nations urbanize and citizens become wealthier,
they consume more resource-intensive foods,
such as meat and dairy,
intensifying the already enormous burden
on our ecosystems, the animals, our health,
and perhaps especially the climate.
The most common indicator
for humans' massive impact on the environment
is the increase in greenhouse gas emissions.
In London, I wanted to learn more about the relationship
between meat and our climate.
[woman] Here at Chatham House we've been working on meat consumption
and climate change and the interaction between the two
for about two years now.
We recognize that the livestock sector
is a major driver of climate change but one that's often overlooked.
So we wanted to try and explore why that's the case
and what could be done to try and address this awareness gap
in what we're calling the cycle of inertia,
by which governments aren't taking action on a really critical issue.
We found in our survey of 12 countries
that 83% of participants, respondents,
recognize that human activity is a major driver of climate change,
but only 30% recognize the livestock sector as a key driver.
That's really striking because we know
that the livestock sector contributes 15% of greenhouse gas emissions,
which is roughly equivalent to every vehicle on the planet,
so we're talking about a major source here
of which people aren't aware.
We don't learn about the climate impact of food production at schools,
we don't see it on a day-to-day basis in the mainstream media.
Without tackling global overconsumption of meat,
we will inevitably see dangerous levels of climate change,
that we'll face more frequent supply shocks,
so a situation in which crops fail
and we have less food supply than we might otherwise expect.
[narrator] In early 2016,
a team of researchers from the University of Oxford
released a study about the climate and health benefits of various diets.
The worldwide media response was enormous.
This was the first global study that estimated what would happen
if we stopped eating meat and animal products altogether.
[man] Previous studies have mostly looked
at the environmental benefits of dietary change.
We modeled three dietary scenarios,
diets that conformed to global dietary guidelines.
On top of this, we implemented two vegetarian scenarios,
one which is a normal lacto-ovo vegetarian scenario
and one vegan scenario, which doesn't include any animal products.
Continuing our diets from now to 2050
would mean a huge increase in greenhouse gas emissions.
We project that greenhouse gas emissions would be increased
by about 50%.
If people change from their expected diets
to global dietary guidelines,
then greenhouse gas emissions
could be reduced
by about a third.
If people went
to a vegetarian diet,
that would increase
to about two-thirds,
and then if people even went
to a vegan diet,
that would result in reductions
in greenhouse gas emissions
of about 70%,
so more than two-thirds.
So the headline results of our study
were that a move to more plant-based diets
could reduce greenhouse gas emissions
of up to two-thirds
and result in reduced climate damages
and reduced expenditure
for healthcare-related services of $1.5 trillion.
So, this is gonna pass right through your digestive tract...
[man] If a physician is practicing medicine in the West,
in developed nations,
the vast majority of patients that we are seeing
and the litany of diseases they bring in
are the result of them running a high fat,
high animal protein, high sugar food stream
through their bloodstream and their tissues,
hour after hour, day after day.
We used to think that food just brings in calories
for energy and proteins for structural building uses,
but we now know that food brings in information.
It turns genes on and turns genes off,
genes that stabilize your tissues,
that suppress cancer growth, that suppress inflammation,
and that's what whole plant foods do,
as opposed to animal-based foods that stimulate growth hormones
and processes that promote cancer growth,
that are oxidizing agents that damage our tissues.
Oh, I have thought about the day
when all Americans, all people around the world, are eating a plant-based diet.
A vast number of ill people in our country
would dwindle down rapidly.
The trillions of dollars that we spend on just treating their symptoms,
the surgeries not done and stents not placed
and scans not ordered,
the economics actually should drive this change in awareness as well.
So there's a lot of positive forces converging.
I'm just hoping we have enough time
for this widespread knowledge to sink in
and be acted upon by enough people.
[Springmann] The findings of our study with regards to health are that,
if people change their diets
to diets that would be in line with global dietary guidelines,
then about five million lives
could be saved.
If people went
to vegetarian diets,
that would increase
to seven million lives saved,
and if they went to vegan diets,
that would increase
to eight million lives saved.
So almost any major, um... region and country
could expect large savings due to dietary change.
We indeed believe that governments have a major role to play
by shaping the food environment that we are all in,
for example, by mandating food labeling,
taxing, for example, foods in regards to their greenhouse gas emissions,
which would encourage the consumption
of environmentally more sustainable foods
and reduce the consumption of highly greenhouse gas emitting foods,
such as animal products.
[narrator] While I was researching
the effects of meat consumption on biodiversity,
I came across a quote that stuck with me.
"You eat a steak, you kill a lemur in Madagascar.
You eat a chicken, you kill an Amazonian parrot."
It was a comment made by a researcher
on a study about the destruction of habitat
for animal pasture and feed crops.
I met with the author of the paper in Miami, Florida.
[man] Currently, there is a mass extinction,
that's called the sixth mass extinction.
If you look at natural background rates of extinction occurring in the world,
that's been going on for millions of years,
we're at an accelerated rate, about a thousand times
what natural background rates are.
[insects chirruping]
[birds calling]
Biodiversity, it's the fabric of life.
It's the enormous assemblage of animals and plants
that exist on this planet that we barely understand right now.
Tropical countries are blanketed in this biodiversity.
It's very important for us to protect that,
not only because of what we know about it right now
but because of what we don't know about it.
We need to keep that around for future generations
for them to discover and understand
and develop products for human beings that are beneficial
but also just for the right of life to exist and flourish and evolve in the future.
The strongest force driving extinction around the world is animal product consumption
because it is responsible for the destruction
of more habitats around the world
than any other human activity.
If we look at the Amazon, which is the largest tropical forest in the world,
it's the heart of biodiversity.
Over 75% of all the deforested land in the Amazon
has been cut to produce livestock,
either to directly put cattle on pasture that is grown there instead of the forest,
or to plant soy or corn which is fed to livestock
and nowadays shipped all around the world to feed livestock in other countries.
So the destruction of the Amazon has been driven
by animal product consumption, period.
If everyone on the planet went vegan,
that would free up an enormous amount of land to be used for other resources.
So one thing that could be done is restoring habitats
to traditional natural ecosystems, connecting them together,
creating corridors between endangered habitats.
At the same time, it could allow the development of biofuels
on properties as well
so that we could become more of a carbon neutral society.
There's a lot of innovation that could occur
on those properties if we pull meat consumption
and meat production off of those lands.
[narrator] A diet rich in meat would require a 50% increase
in global cropland area by 2050.
If the world went vegan in 2050, we would require less cropland
than we did in the year 2000.
This would allow us to reforest an area
around the size of the entire Amazon rain forest.
Pastures cover a quarter of our global land mass.
Bill Ripple, an ecologist from the University of Oregon,
is researching what happens to pastures
when animals no longer graze.
[Ripple] At the Hart Mountain National Wildlife Refuge,
the managers removed all the cattle in 1990.
We found a decrease of 90% in the amount of bare soil.
We found an increase in willow.
That increase is 388%, so that's significant
because willow is an important biodiversity indicator
for these streamside areas,
because many species of plants and animals
are correlated with the abundance
of willow and aspen.
This is about a 70-centimeter diameter aspen tree,
originated in the 1800s,
before livestock arrived on Hart Mountain.
I think the importance of Hart Mountain here
is because it's a rare case where we've documented
what happens when cattle are removed from a landscape,
what happens when cattle are removed from streamside areas.
Today, animal agriculture uses a big percentage
of the land surface,
and if that could be converted to more natural uses,
I think biodiversity would increase in those cases
where there's less grazing, less feed crop production.
♪
[narrator] One of the countries
that featured frequently in my research was India.
In a few years, it will be
the most populous country on Earth.
I kept wondering, what does a society look like
when 32% of its population is vegetarian?
A staggering 400 million people in India don't eat any meat.
Followed by 80% of the population,
Hinduism is the major religion of India.
Hindus advocate nonviolence and respect for all life,
embracing vegetarianism.
Culturally, we have what I love to call a mild indifference towards animals,
which is the reason you see animals all around you when you live.
You have your birds of all sorts are not getting shot down.
You have dogs, of course, you have cows.
Your monkeys in cities, you know.
We see ourselves more as a unified whole,
where there is a place for all other elements of nature as well.
-[pedestrians chatting] -[horns honking]
[narrator] Cows in India are a common sight.
Around 50 million stray cattle and stray dogs
roam the streets of India in search of food.
Once the provider for the family,
cows are now seen by Hindus as a maternal figure,
males and females alike sacred for their generosity.
The slaughter of cows is banned in most parts of India.
Violators of the ban may face up to ten years in prison.
[woman] People think that Indians treat cows as a holy animal,
but the reality is far from it.
India is apparently the largest producer of milk in the world,
so it comes as no surprise that India is also the largest exporter of beef
and fifth largest exporter of leather products.
Because of the ban on cow slaughter,
dairy owners use buffaloes, because, of course, buffaloes
are exempted from this law.
[horn honks]
There's another very small section of dairy owners
who actually leave their animals on the road.
Now, one weird thing, that this concept
of leaving animals free on the road
is much better than the animals being in the dairy,
but they don't have access to food and water,
so they're left with no choice but to find food in garbage bins.
Most of these throwaway eatables
are disposed of in a plastic bag which is tied.
These animals can't open the bag
so they inevitably eat these bags
along with the food items in it.
[woman] In the urban youth that is going to all these colleges,
even the way these big corporates are coming to India
and sort of targeting the youth,
the consumption of non-veg is definitely rising
in the urban elite youth who think it's cool or hip
to sort of consume non-veg, to say that,
"Oh, I'm being open-minded and liberal
and saying I can have non-veg, it's a right."
[Sharma] As middle-class incomes grow
with growing economy,
that's when the consumption of luxury items increases,
and cheese and dairy and more eggs and meats,
including exotic meats is all a part of that continuum.
If we can simply hold steady
the rate of growth of non-vegetarianism, that will be a big victory.
[narrator] Palitana, a city in the state of Gujarat
in northern India, made headlines in 2014
as the first vegetarian city in the world.
Also known as the city of temples,
Palitana is one of the most holy sites to the Jains,
an ancient religion said to be even older than Buddhism.
[Indian instruments playing]
[speaking foreign language]
The Jain Dharma believes in nonviolence.
No birds, no animals, no insects,
no human beings should be harmed.
Each and every living beings have the right to live.
You live and let live others.
Last hundred years...
many slaughterhouses are allowed.
That's why it's our duty to stop them.
If they are not Jains, so what?
This is the holy place.
You can't kill any living beings.
You can't harm them.
[newscaster speaking foreign language]
[Maharaj] All the monks of Palitana, we went to fast.
If Gujarat government
will not stop the slaughtering, then we'll sacrifice our lives
for the animals.
I announced, "If you want flesh,
we will donate our meat, our own meat."
You cut us, you kill us.
So you eat of our flesh. You eat of our body.
[narrator] A vegetarian zone was established in 1999,
two kilometers along the main road leading to the temple hill.
In an area of 250 meters to each side, the sale of meat,
fish, and eggs is banned by law.
The aim of the monks is to establish a larger zone
within a nine-kilometer radius around the city.
All butchers, we took meeting here.
Approximately 80 to 90 butchers came here.
So we give them options that whatever your need is,
we will help you.
We gave them money for change their professions.
[men speaking foreign language]
[narrator] The former butchers,
who now had grocery and clothing stores,
did not want to speak on camera,
but they denied having received a compensation
and said they felt ashamed of their former profession.
The Muslim community, which accounts for 25% of the city's population
compared to only 3% Jains, was not happy about the ban
and deemed their religious freedom had been violated.
When I discovered a backyard slaughterhouse,
the meat had already been sold
and the leftovers were fed to the dogs.
The butchers were suspicious and reluctant to talk,
similar to the city officials who referred me
to the district headquarters in Bhavnagar.
[Maharaj] We trust on Lord Adinath that very soon
the entire Palitana, holy city, vegetarian zone,
vegetarian city.
And not only Palitana.
My wish is
that whatever the missions going from Palitana,
it should be whole, toward the entire world.
Whole world should be vegetarian.
[narrator] In Mumbai, I wanted to learn more about Jainism
and got in touch with Pramoda Chitrabhanu, a vegan Jain.
I met her in the district of Malabar Hill,
one of the most posh residential areas in Mumbai
and an exclusively vegetarian neighborhood.
Ahimsa is the center of this philosophy
because in 599 BC, Lord Mahavira,
who was the last apostle of the Jain religion,
he said that those who disregard and disrespect
the existence of life in earth, water, fire, air,
vegetation, and all life forms,
disregards and disrespects his own existence
because all life are intertwined with each other.
The best means to stop these people from eating meat
would be through educating.
Education is the only way.
I don't think so by stopping and burning the slaughterhouses, all those things.
And to stop that, one has to go out
and educate them, talk to them,
make them understand why we are talking about this,
make them understand that animals are not a commodity.
[narrator] My experience in India left me wondering
what our cities and communities could look like
if we no longer viewed animals as commodities.
In Leipzig, I met with artist Hartmut Kiewert,
who envisions a very different way of living with animals.
[pig snorts]
[narrator] During my research, I came across the "Zoopolis,"
a term describing an environment
in which humans and animals not only coexist
but also thrive alongside one another.
[woman] The idea of Zoopolis arose from the idea
that urban theory, ideas about the city and how cities work,
were really only about people,
and when I started thinking about, "Well, who actually lives in cities?"
it was clear that, and it is clear that,
there's a lot of nonhumans that live in cities,
and so I wanted to create what I called a transspecies urban theory,
and also a transspecies urban practice
in which built environment professionals--
environmental designers, architects, planners,
landscape architects, engineers--
actually thought about nonhuman residents of cities
as well as human inhabitants and their needs.
But I think it raises the question
of how do you include animals
in a democratic decision-making process,
in a discourse of citizenship,
in a way that makes their...
needs and wants and desires part of the conversation?
[narrator] Two Canadian philosophers
turned the concept of the Zoopolis into a radical claim,
going so far as to consider animals our co-citizens.
While most animal rights philosophers
call for a separation of the world's humans and animals,
Will Kymlicka and Sue Donaldson believe
that a shared world is possible.
[Donaldson] If we look around just out the window here,
we see all kinds of animals who make their homes
in our cities, our communities, our houses,
and the idea that we could somehow live separately from animals
and avoid domination and exploitation that way
is completely unrealistic.
[Kymlicka] Yeah, so we distinguish three categories,
or three broad patterns, of relationships.
So domesticated animals we think should be seen as
members of our society,
and the way in which we affirm membership is through citizenship.
So we should think of domesticated animals as our co-citizens,
and that means, like other citizens,
they would have the rights to protection from harm,
rights to health care,
rights to political representation
to have their interests taken into account.
And, of course, the right to live here and rights of residency.
The second category concerns animals who continue to live
independently of humans on their own habitat.
So there's not much wilderness left in this world,
we keep conquering and colonizing,
so we recognize rights of territory
and the rights of wilderness animals
to live autonomously on their territory.
And in political theory, we bundle these rights to territory and autonomy
under the idea of sovereignty,
so we should think of wild animals
as having sovereignty rights
over themselves and their territory.
And the third category,
which is in some ways the least studied,
the least theorized in the animal rights debate,
concerns the nondomesticated animals who live amongst us.
So, urban wildlife, to simplify it.
Crows, pigeons, ducks, mice,
squirrels.
So in our view, we need to recognize
that these animals live amongst us,
and so they have residency rights
and we need to learn to coexist.
So they have rights to be accommodated
in this shared space.
But that's a looser kind of relationship
than with citizenship, and so we call that "denizenship."
So, so long as we are committed to the idea
that we're going to be living together
with at least some domesticated animals,
what we want is a way of framing that relationship
that imposes on us an obligation to be responsive to them,
to the animals, and that's what we view citizenship as doing.
[narrator] It was difficult to picture a world with animals as our co-citizens.
But there were already tiny communities
where this idea didn't seem too far from reality.
German author and activist Hilal Sezgin
moved from the city to the countryside
and unintentionally adopted a herd of sheep.
[ducks quacking]
[harrumphs]
[keyboard clacking]
[Steve] Hmm, she's due for a family walk.
♪
[narrator] I heard that someone else had traded life in suburbia for the countryside.
Esther the Wonder Pig.
Through a crowd-funding campaign,
Steve, Derek and Esther founded a farm sanctuary
just outside of Toronto.
[Derek] So Happily Ever Esther Farm Sanctuary is 50 acres,
and half of it is treed and the other half is fields.
We had an Indiegogo fundraising campaign,
and in 60 days, we raised $450,000.
So this is the forest paddock.
And... here's someone living a dream.
-[Steve chuckles] -Here's Leonard.
There's a gate up there that allows him to get into that area
from behind the barn and into the barn, so he can go wherever he wants.
You know, pigs in the wild will travel six to eight miles in a day.
The second we opened up the gate for the big pigs to come into the woods,
they were like, "What?" You know, "This is awesome!"
I love seeing the pigs in the woods just chill,
like Esther when she's walking through the woods.
She's just in her element, she's so happy.
The idea behind a sanctuary is to just let the animals be themselves.
It's really neat to see an animal come here all on their own,
you know, just one, and see how they start integrating in
and creating friendships with different animals
and cross-species where everybody fits in.
You know, not everybody gets along,
and we recognize that too, and they don't have to,
'cause there's two sides to the fence.
They can be on that side or they can be on this side.
It's just about recognizing the needs for them.
[narrator] The idea of farm sanctuaries
is to provide a safe haven for animals
that were rescued or escaped from factory farms
and slaughterhouses.
Here, they are cared for and given the opportunity
to behave as naturally as possible in a protective environment.
I was wondering what the people who are running these sanctuaries
had learned from living so closely with farmed animals
over the years.
[man] Farm Sanctuary started back in the mid 1980s
to combat the abuses of factory farming,
and we started by investigating farms and stockyards and slaughterhouses.
We'd find living animals literally thrown in trash cans
or on piles of dead animals.
We started rescuing them
and we were selling vegan hot dogs
at Grateful Dead shows to fund the work.
And we now have three sanctuaries,
one in New York, two in California.
The first animal farm sanctuary rescue was Hilda,
who was a sheep, who was left on a pile of dead animals behind a stockyard.
The maggots were so thick, you could hear them buzzing
as they devoured these carcasses.
And out of this pile, a sheep lifts her head.
And we were stunned that a living animal would be discarded like garbage this way.
And we picked her off the dead pile thinking she would have to be euthanized.
But as the veterinarian started looking at her and examining her,
she started perking up and then she stood up,
and she lived a good, long life.
And ultimately all of us, human beings and other animals,
want to live a good, long life,
and farm animals are not given that opportunity.
[engine idling]
[woman] Hi!
Animals at farm animal sanctuaries
behave very differently than if you were to meet them out on a farm.
Many of these animals are incredibly resilient
and they've lost their fear of people,
and that allows people to see their personalities.
[sniffing]
We had these three turkeys, Boone, Alphonso and Hershel,
and so in the early days, they would follow us everywhere,
when we were doing tours and taking people around.
And sometimes you can tell
it's like a wife has brought her husband and her kids,
and she's the one who has compassion in her heart for animals
and she's trying to expose her family to it.
We see this a lot.
[turkey gobbling]
So this father was walking around,
and you could tell he just sort of kept to himself
and had his hands in his pockets and was sort of marveling
and laughing and smirking at the turkeys as they would follow around,
and if the kids would laugh or clap their hands, the turkeys would respond.
But at the end of the tour, I looked over and he was petting Hershel's head,
and then he sort of squatted down and he was face to face with Hershel,
and I saw like a tear stream down his face,
and he said to his kids that he was wrong all these years
and that he was so resistant to his wife, their mother,
and that he never realized that they could be so friendly
and that they had such unique personalities
and that he could ever find himself being so fond of a turkey.
♪
[children calling]
[narrator] It is the first open day of the year
at Friend Animal Rescue in Kent, England.
I came here to learn how visitors interact
with farmed animals at a sanctuary.
[lively chattering]
[man] When I first turned up here, I was a committed meat eater.
And I met Marion.
I just saw this little woman here on her own
with all these pigs and cows and sheep and horses,
just caring for them, feeding them and watering them.
I was just like, wow, it was like a Disney cartoon.
It inspired me.
I firmly believed I had to eat meat.
And on the premise, really, if I didn't, I would get sick, possibly die.
So when she was explaining to me about the industry,
the farmed animal industry and what happens,
they're slaughtered so young, for example.
Most of them are babies, under a year old.
You kind of-- I got defensive, I think a lot of people did.
[woman] You like carrots, don't you?
Oh! [laughs]
[Eaton] There's only so many farmed animals
because people choose to eat them.
When you start meeting these animals,
it brings out a softer side,
and I think you have to be very, very kind of fix minded
or very almost brutal to suddenly meet these animals
and decide, "I could just carry on eating them."
It affected me big-time, to such an extent,
not only did I become vegan,
I ended up staying 15 years, marrying Marion,
and it changed my life forever.
So that would be a very good example of what this place does.
[cow moos]
[crowd laughs]
[horse snorts]
[narrator] The Erdlingshof,
a small sanctuary in the Bavarian forest,
has a special focus on male cows
who are rescued from the dairy industry.
[water rushing]
♪
[Baur] Sanctuaries provide a sort of aspiration
to the kind of world we could create,
one where the animals live with us and we live with them,
and nobody has to be afraid of anybody because we're not killing and eating them.
Now, there are also animals that are carnivores,
and that creates some challenging situations
for somebody with a vegan mindset.
But at the end of the day, certain animals don't have a choice.
Lions cannot live on plants.
Human beings do have a choice.
We can live and we can thrive eating plants instead of animals.
[narrator] The role of animals in society has evolved dramatically.
We've learned a lot about animals' cognitive abilities and social development.
Pigs, for example, share a number of cognitive capacities
with other highly intelligent species,
yet the law still considers all animals mere things.
[woman] There are laws affecting all animals.
Within the United States, we have the Animal Welfare Act.
Sadly, though it's called the Animal Welfare Act,
it doesn't cover farm animals, so it doesn't cover 99% of the animals
in industrial use in the United States,
and there are other important exceptions as well,
but let's face it, that's the big exception.
It's all the animals, basically, from a statistical point of view.
All the animals are farm animals, they're not protected by federal law.
[man] For hundreds of years, there's been this high, thick legal wall,
and on one side of that are all the legal things
and the other side are the legal persons.
If you take a snapshot in 2015,
all the nonhuman animals of the world are on the thing side
and all the human beings are on the person side.
It wasn't always that way.
Two hundred years ago, women might have been things.
Slaves were things, children were things,
but right now, all nonhuman animals are things
and all humans are persons.
And the work of the Nonhuman Rights Project,
especially the initial goal, is to break through that wall
and begin bringing as many nonhuman animals as possible
through that wall from the side of the things to the side of the persons.
Things are slaves and slaves are things.
When humans were slaves, they were treated horrendously.
Nonhumans are slaves, they're treated horrendously as well.
And if they're not treated horrendously,
like my dog Yogi who's running around here,
he's not treated horrendously at all.
He's a very happy dog.
But it's really because I want to treat him that way.
If I want him killed, he would be killed.
If I want to do something to him that doesn't amount to cruelty,
I could do something to him.
And that's not right.
[woman] Any lawyer working for social change
will tell you that the law usually follows society
and not the other way around.
And what we've seen over the last few decades
is that society has made tremendous strides
in understanding that animals are deserving of our compassion and our respect.
We now know that, in all the ways that matter, animals are just like us.
They feel fear, they feel pain, but they also experience joy and positive emotions.
One meaningful legal change that we can make for animals tomorrow
is to give them the right to have someone represent their interests in court.
Obviously animals can't speak for themselves,
and in that respect they're just like children or incapacitated people
who have special advocates who go to court for them.
We could set up the same system for animals
so that lawyers can go speak on behalf of animals,
represent their interests and ensure that they're protected.
[Sullivan] As people become more concerned, there will be more regulation.
Then the products will become more expensive,
the use will be reduced.
I don't think there will ever be a law against eating meat,
but I think that the day will come when it will become socially unacceptable.
I don't see... I think that it's so interesting
that 98% of this country eats meat.
It seems very unlikely that we could pass a law prohibiting it at this point,
and yet even at this very moment,
they're nervous that that could happen,
that their meat will be taken away from them.
I don't see that that's the way that the law will evolve.
I do see it as the way that society will evolve.
I do see that the law will evolve
to get more and more strict in its regulation of the industries.
[narrator] The number of plant-based alternatives is growing,
with taste and texture growing ever closer to actual animal products.
But there is something else making headlines around the world: cultured meat.
The same technique used to grow human tissue in regenerative medicine
is now used to produce meat without killing animals.
In August of 2013, the first hamburger grown in a lab
was presented to 200 journalists from around the world in London.
Financed by Google co-founder Sergey Brin,
the cost of the patty was estimated to be 250,000 Euros.
Okay, everyone sitting here with bated breath
is dying to see what's underneath the cloche,
so can you do the honors and lift the lid on your creation?
I can.
[woman] Okay. Now, obviously...
[man] Why do we need cultured meat?
It's basically because none of the substitutes so far
have been sort of capable of completely mimicking
the meat experience, if you like.
Uh, and in my mind, people want meat
and not meat substitutes,
unless the meat substitute at some point becomes so good
that you cannot distinguish them from the real thing.
Uh, we, uh...
[Post] Better food security for the entire population.
Less impact on the environment.
And less animal welfare issues.
Those are the three major concerns.
And for those important reasons, I really hope that at some point
we can deliver a product, so that people can still eat their beloved meat
without the negative consequences.
We use cells from a cow.
We harvest them through a harmless procedure,
and they have cells-- we all have cells in our muscles--
that are sitting there waiting to repair an injury.
And they have the capacity to multiply,
so we take them out of the cow,
expand them in the lab until we have 40 billion cells.
And we do it in a particular way
so that they form real muscle fibers,
and that's the basis for our meat.
So if you have a lot of those muscle fibers,
we can basically make a hamburger out of them.
[narrator] Apart from meat, I learned
that there were also a number of startups
working on other cultured products
to replace their animal-derived counterparts
in the near future.
[woman] The mission of New Harvest
is to accelerate the post-animal bio-economy.
So we're trying to build a whole new economy
where animal products are made without animals,
and New Harvest's role is in providing that initial catalytic step
that helps researchers get a first amount of data done or a first prototype done
so that once they have that prototype,
other investors and other funders will get involved.
Cultured meat is getting a cell and then dividing the cell.
So there's no reason for GMO to be involved at all
in the production of cultured meat.
Cultured meat will not come from a lab.
The actual vision of this future is one that looks like a brewery,
and you go to a brewery and you see these gigantic stainless-steel tanks,
and you don't perceive the brewer as a scientist,
you think of him as an artisan or a crafts person.
You know, I've been combing the comments of cultured meat and cultured milk
and cultured egg articles for a long time,
and a lot of people are like, "Well, if this tastes as good,
then how could I choose something that came from a slaughtered animal
if what my experience is is the same?"
[narrator] In San Francisco, several companies are working
on animal products without the animal.
Indie Bio is a startup accelerator for synthetic biology.
Backed by a venture capital fund,
companies that join the program receive a quarter million dollars
and the lab space to reach a prototype in just four months.
[man] Indie Bio is an accelerator
for early stage biotechnology companies.
The vision was to create something totally new.
We think we can use biology to replace animals,
so instead of domesticating animals, we're domesticating cells.
And we're really focusing on a new paradigm
in producing the foods and goods that people want,
without the environmental or ethical aspects of using animals.
[man] We're making gelatin without the animal.
So there are a litany of consumer goods
that contain gelatin that many people don't realize,
in everything from yoghurt to gummi bears,
industrial applications, medicines.
So the approach that we're taking
is to engineer microbial factories
that can make the same exact gelatin
that people would get out of animal tissues,
but instead of taking it from an animal and doing it in a top-down approach,
we're building it from scratch with stuff like yeast.
How long will it take? Are we talking about five years?
Are we talking about ten years? I hope it's five,
when we see the last animal product taken off the shelf
and replaced with a biologically derived, clean version of that product,
whether it's meat or whether it's milk or whether it's eggs.
[narrator] Not far away, in a space for DIY biology,
a group of biohackers is working on what most people say they could never give up:
cheese.
[man] Real Vegan Cheese is a project
to basically make cheese
that is exactly like cow's milk cheese,
or any other animal cheese, but make it without using animals.
And so the way we do this is we search databases
that give us the sequence of DNA which encodes for the proteins in milk.
We then take that information and go to a synthesis service
that makes us that snippet of DNA.
We put it into yeast.
That yeast then starts producing that protein.
So now these yeasts are sort of like our dairy.
Sort of like, instead of milking cows,
we're actually just getting these proteins out of the yeast.
This is important because these proteins
are what give milk all of its really interesting properties
and what gives cheese the properties that you associate with cheese.
Things like meltability, stretchability, that texture.
Those proteins are the most important thing.
So that's what the project is.
It's taking yeast and making these exact same proteins
so we can make real cheese which is also vegan.
[device rattling]
What we get out, if we do our job well,
is exactly like what the cows produce.
The protein is identical.
So once it's purified, this is not genetically modified.
It's a natural product.
So our future plans, once we can make cheese
out of our yeast-cultured proteins,
are to file intellectual property, file a patent on this,
but then abandon it, so that it is in the public record,
it is prior art but we don't own any rights to it.
You could imagine that if someone like, uh...
someone who is also involved in the dairy industry directly,
if they developed this and owned all the IP,
they could make a few products just for vegans
but they could prevent someone else from pushing it far enough
that it would challenge their existing business.
So we don't want someone who has an interest in dairy continuing
to own all of the rights to this.
If it's open source, no one can do that.
[narrator] While I was researching future foods,
I came across a recent discovery by scientists
from the University of Oregon.
They said they had found the unicorn,
an algae that is healthier than kale
and when deep fried, tastes like bacon.
[man] We started out with about 40 or so ideas.
And today I have three of the five that we tested.
This here is a rice cracker. These are going to be a little bit more savory
and bring out a little bit of that umami taste that's in the seaweed.
And then this is just kind of an interesting way
to use a bit of the salt that you would find
in kind of those ocean tastes.
Dulse is a bit of a novel ingredient
that many people in America aren't very familiar with,
outside of sushi or seaweed salads.
So it's nice to kind of be at the forefront
of getting this ingredient into kind of the mainstream.
[sizzling]
[man] You know, in 2025, there will be 7 1/2 billion people on Earth.
And every human being
needs roughly 50 grams of protein a day to live,
so the world's gonna demand 400 million grams of carbohydrates a day.
And we figured out that, at least with this dulse,
if we had a 25 by 25 mile stretch in the ocean
off the Oregon coast,
we could grow enough protein to feed the world, just like that.
So the potential is extremely large.
[thunder rumbling]
[man] Uh, well, people got very interested in the dulse story
because of its link to bacon,
and the fact that it has some of the flavors of bacon
and is also nutritionally much better for you than bacon,
it doesn't have the cholesterol and the high-fat content,
makes it very appealing to people.
Ah, how are the dulse looking?
Ah. Looking good.
Yeah. That's fantastic.
Bubbling away.
So these are our 6,000-liter tanks.
So we're hoping to produce about 30 pounds of dulse per week
from these tanks.
What we found with dulse is that it grows vegetatively.
So what you can do is you can basically break a plant apart
and each piece will grow into a new plant.
So it's very, very easy to grow,
and this is one of the great benefits
of this type of cultivation.
It has a good protein content,
high iodine, high potassium.
And so in many respects, it is a superfood.
It has a lot of potential, I think, in the long-term future
as an alternative to some of these other terrestrial crops,
and also an alternative to meat.
So the amino acid profile is pretty good,
and it has the savory flavor,
so I think there's a very good potential for it.
[Post] So, what we are doing, we are taking a small sample from a cow.
Use its muscle-specific stem cells
that have sort of a limited capacity to proliferate.
That means that we have to go back to the cow after a certain period
and get new stem cells.
And then it's not a completely animal-free product,
but I don't really think that's that important.
Maybe for vegans it is, but for most people, it may not be.
Still we would be able, and that's obviously the condition,
we would be able to reduce the total number of cows tremendously.
Even if it will not reduce energy consumption,
then it will still reduce methane emission,
so it will still have an effect on our greenhouse gas emission.
But we are more ambitious than that.
We really want to reduce energy consumption as well.
I'm saying that there's nothing in it,
but that's not completely true.
There is...
Oh, this is just a small-scale cell culture,
but it's tiny.
Tiny muscle rings in these little wells.
We are never, with this cultured beef program,
are never going to be as efficient
and as friendly to the environment
or to animals as a vegetarian or a vegan diet.
We will never achieve that level of efficiency.
So if vegetarians and vegans start to eat this,
that's sort of the opposite of what my goal is
in this whole endeavor.
The target group is pretty much myself,
the people who are stubbornly eating meat,
while knowing that they probably should not.
If at some point we are capable
of producing exactly the same tissue,
exactly the same sort of sensory quality of meat,
at a competitive price,
I think it will eradicate traditional livestock meat production.
[Nibert] It's absolutely imperative
that people recognize
that one of the worst practices ever developed on the planet
was this consumption of other animals for food and using them for resources,
and we're never going to get our societies back on track
unless we step back from that practice,
and we can begin to do that, first of all,
by changing the way that we eat.
Nothing serious is going to change
until there's just a catastrophe that forces us to change.
And my best guess, it would be something related to the...
It could be an issue about tainted food,
but more likely it's going to be an environmental catastrophe
that we just realize that we're killing the planet, and then...
we'll be forced to engage in some radical rethinking,
not because we suddenly care about animals
but just because we're destroying our own existence.
[narrator] Reflecting on my search for a post-meat world,
the resource-intensive methods of animal production seem outdated,
especially in the light of the challenges
we'll face in the near and far future.
What we eat has tangible consequences,
for the world around us
and for the trillions of nonhuman animals.
The end of meat as we know it
might just be the best solution we have
to save ourselves, the animals and the planet.
Of course, if we're talking about stopping meat overnight,
that would be a problem because overnight we'd have lots of people going jobless.
But the truth is that all industries evolve.
Everything changes.
If you talk to people about cars coming, for example,
everybody would be worrying, what's going to happen to the horse carriages?
Right? But it doesn't happen overnight, thankfully, and everybody adapts.
♪
[Sullivan] There is a vision of the future
that doesn't include the exploitation of animals.
You don't get somewhere unless you envision it.
And people really seem to have trouble envisioning
this world without animal exploitation.
We've always done it, so we'll always continue to do it.
But if you take a step back
and look at where technology is,
what we do to animals is just insane.
[Brown] The first time I had visited a farm animal sanctuary,
blew my mind.
There was nothing like it.
I could not believe, not only what I was learning at the time
about the sheer number of farmed animals
who suffer and who are killed for human consumption,
but then to get to know them
and to realize that these are the individuals
who make up those statistics,
and the statistics can be staggering,
but it's even more overwhelming
when you get to know the victims.
And that affects me to every cell of my being,
because this is the social justice movement of our times.
It affects the most number of beings.
[Post] Twenty years from now, we will look back
with a completely different perspective
and our kids will say to each other,
"Well, you know, in the days of our parents,
they still killed animals for our food supply."
And they will probably look at that as sort of barbarian.
♪
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