Vegan: Everyday Stories

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Saw this at the premier in LA last night. There were a couple redditors in the audience and at least one redditor IN the film.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 3 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/bickerstaff πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 18 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies

[removed]

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 1 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/[deleted] πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 18 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies

Does anyone know when this will be available digitally?

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 1 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/corbinbaustin πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Jun 19 2016 πŸ—«︎ replies
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(calling animals) - Whoo! Whoo! Two months ago, I was going to put the chickens up like I do every night, and they all come running and following me, and she was just down. And she wouldn't get up. And I thought, that's weird. And so I went over and just gently walked over to her and said can you get up? And she just looked up at me and did that (whines). And she couldn't get up. I picked her up and I just tried to set her down gently and she just collapsed. And so, evidently she injured her tendon or muscle, pulled a muscle, I'm not sure what she did, but I brought her in the house, and she stayed in Tommy's office for a couple of days. And I fed her oatmeal and. There's a, I take this stuff called zeal, and it's got turmeric in it and ashwagandha. It's got all these wonderful herbs and stuff in it and foods. And so I thought well, it's good for me, it helps my inflammation, so I can give it to the chickens. So I started giving her the zeal in little syringes two or three times a day. And she started getting better, and a lot of TLC, and next thing you know, oh hey, that's Dixie. You know Dixie. (laughs) But the next thing you know, she was walking better Even though she was kind of like Hopalong (mumbles) or Hopalong Cassidy Kid. 'Cause she'd still kind of hop along, but she was doing just fine, and then couple days ago, she was down again. I went to put 'em up in the chicken coop and she was sittin' down right there at the edge of the coop. Before I went vegan, I loved Chik-Fil-A sandwiches, you know, chicken sandwiches, as much as everybody, and I would come home with a sandwich, a chicken sandwich and I'd have my chickens at my feet. And not everybody gets the tactile, you know, experience of living on a ranch like this going vegan. You know, I started having all these conflicts in my mind, in my soul, that I would be eating a chicken and loving this one. We never ate our own animals, even the cows. We never slaughtered our own cows. We always bought the pretty pink packages at the grocery store. And she's going to sleep. And I remember vividly when I was working on her leg in the kitchen and giving her a little syringe of that zeal, I remember vividly that I was working on her, and I got the gut feeling of how I used to eat chicken legs when I was working on her leg, and I just started crying at the sink. Just started crying, I mean, I was deep, guttural, horrifying, just sobs. Because I was working on her leg and realizing that, you know, everybody eats them. Never even thinks a thing about it. (loud engine) - Friend of mine called me up, I was working shift work, I was tired. And he goes hey come out here, there's this girl that wants to meet you. And I said yeah, you're lying. You always are. And he was. And I went anyway. And anyway, I met her. Yeah, Renee's an incredible person. She's, she's always done incredible stuff. One of the early things I saw was she was in a play in Houston, two or three thousand people, threw the roses on the stage and all that stuff 'cause she was the main singer. And she was right on the edge of making it. And it was a wild ride. You could write a book about her, you know, music career. And for whatever reason, it never happened. β™ͺ Oh Shanendoah β™ͺ I long to see you β™ͺ Woah, you rolling river β™ͺ Oh Shanendoah, I long to see you β™ͺ Across the wild Missouri β™ͺ Herman's very soothed by music. And so I sing to him all the time. And I see his eyes change when I sing to him, and I watch his ears perk up. I watch the hair go down on his back. He was on a concrete floor at that kill shelter. It was not nice. He had barking dogs all around him. And so, he was very stressed when we got him. Very. (saw whirring) Right over there, we're building his fences and his home. His little feet are going to touch the earth for the first time in a long time. Just gotta get him out of here. I want him out of here so bad. - Herman's owner had passed away. He had been left for six months. The kids came and cleared out the house, cleared out the furniture, got the dog and the cat, but left the pig. And Herman had been fending for himself, so the Animal Control officers had picked him up, brought him into the shelter. And Renee, God love her, she's a week out from this event. She has spent all the money she's got on this project. Her husband, at the time we talked on the phone, her husband was out in the mid-day sun mowing and shoring up fences to contain the bull calves that didn't go to slaughter. And she said I don't know Salise, I don't know if I can, a pig, I've never dealt with a pig, I don't even have a place to put him, I don't know. - When that big storm came through, everybody lost fence. Lots of Lake Jackson, lots of Danbury, so we got tons of calls, and then she called me with this. I couldn't tell her no. - I think we exchanged 40 or maybe 50,000 emails about how we were going to get this done and who was going to hold him, who was going to pick him up, what were we going to feed him, how were we going to lure him, who was going to house him, how are we going to get his pen built, how are we going to raise the money to build the pen, and it was just like this beehive of activity. And I came to have this enormous respect for Renee, 'cause she really is a, she will just get it done. - The way I look at it is, what comes around goes around. You do something good, somebody returns the favor eventually. I always try to help out. And Renee does the same. - When she started talking about sanctuary, I didn't tell her, but I was thinking I guess I'm gonna get a divorce. Because this is ridiculous. It's not gonna work in Texas. She wanted to try it, and Renee is a very strong-willed person, and you can't tell her not to do something. - I wasn't trying to open up a sanctuary in the state of Texas. It's not been my goal in life. My goal was to be a famous country and western singer, hello? That's what I thought I was gonna be one day. You know? And that didn't happen. And I married a farmer, he's worked hard all his life. He bought this place to supplement his retirement. We hadn't been making any money. Balloon notes were coming due on tractors. He's needin' to buy another rake, and now I'm telling him oh heck no, you ain't taking that red trailer up the road anymore. We're not sellin' any more calves. You send that red trailer up the road one more time, I'm following it. I'll go to the slaughterhouse if I have to. And it was a process for me, because, I mean I love my husband. I didn't want to just say too bad you go up the road. What I've been here is a catalyst for my husband to see a way that he's never been shown before because his history, his culture, his way of viewing the world is so grounded in tradition. Fourth generation cattle rancher. His great grandpa herded cows from San Antonio by horse with spurs, and they had their own brand. And Tommy still has that. That means something to him, to restore that history. So this is Tommy's heritage. For Tommy to say none of that meant anything is, doesn't come easy. But watching his wife change, watching his wife draw the line in the sand, watching his wife pull in all these people from around the world that are supporting us to build a sanctuary in the state of Texas is changing my husband. That's what's changing my husband. - I kinda laughed at her and said it'll never work, and she has actually put me in my place now. Because the vegan world came to her rescue. She started meeting people that allied with her. It was incredible, and I started watching it, and I couldn't believe what was going on. I still, it's kind of like a dream. They're incredible. If she has a problem, somebody in her network helps her out, and it magically disappears. - I think that we all have the power to change and to transform. And we see that every single day at Mercy For Animals. Someone whose family owned a cattle ranch decides to give up everything that they knew to be familiar to become a vegan animal rights activist. We see every single day the power that compassion has. - Is it not better to light a candle, than to curse the darkness? All the darkness in the world cannot put out the light of a single candle. I believe another world is possible. And on a quiet night, I can hear the breathing. It will be difficult, I know. But do not be afraid. Remember Mahatma Ghandi's words. First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, and then you win. The brutes and the bullies have been Goliath. But David is coming. Maybe he's in this room. Maybe he's one of you. And if not you, who? And if not now, when? - Here is my daughter Genesis Butler (applause) - Thank you. Hi, my name is Genesis, and I am eight years old. I am vegan and an activist like my uncle Caesar Chavez was. I went vegan because I don't believe animals should be put in slaughterhouses and circuses. People don't have to eat animals to live. All my favorite foods, like pizza and mac and cheese, I can still eat in a vegan version. I became an activist to protest for what's right. To show kids they have a voice. I protest circuses and other places that imprison animals. I help people who are blinded. They don't know what's happening to the animals. I also leaflet to give information on what's happening and how to go vegan. I even talk to my friends. My goal is to get them to go vegan. I am here for a purpose. My purpose is to get the whole world to go vegan. Thank you for helping me, peace. (applause, cheers) Oh my gosh. - Okay, okay. - She wasn't even four years old. She always had chicken nuggets, that was her favorite meal at the time. And so I read all the parenting books in the world 'cause it was my first child. And a lot of books said if that's all they want to eat and they're picky, just let them eat chicken nuggets or whatever it is all day. And I just said okay, well, I believe the commercials, the white meat and, you know, if you have milk with it or apples and the whole kids' meals and all that. And I would give it to her because it made her happy and at least I thought it made her happy 'cause I believed the advertisements, and it didn't make her happy. She just finally told me one day, she said hey Mom, where do we get our food from? And I said, you know, we get it from the grocery store. And she said no, that's not where we get it from. And she knew, and so I just, at that moment, I knew I had a tough decision to make. Do I tell her the truth? Or do I just keep playing it off? And just my instincts came, kicked in and I said I'm going to tell her the truth. 'Cause I always tell myself as a parent if my child asks me something, I'm going to give them the straight truth because that's what's needed. And I told her we kill animals for the food that she was eating, and she was devastated. And I didn't even know she knew what death meant at that age. And she just knew deep down inside. And she said well, we have to kill, what is it? And I said well, chickens and cows, and I was explaining beef is from cows like the burger? That's not beef, that's a cow. And the chicken is the actual animal, the little bird. And she said you know what? I don't ever want to eat this again. - One of the great things but the maddening things about being an animal rights activist is for the most part, we never have to convince people to care about animals. People already love animals. We just have to convince people to understand that the dog they love is emotionally the same as the cow they eat. That's the disconnect. So it's aligning people's already-existing love for animals with their actions. And so I look at someone like Genesis and to me, she just seems like she's living her beliefs in a way that most people don't. I mean, how many parents have had the experience with their kid where their four year old, their six year old, their eight year old, their nine year old, is eating a hamburger and says Mom, what is this? And the mom says that's a hamburger. Well where does it come from? A cow. And all of a sudden, the child is horrified. And the child almost has to, like, be taught to move past their horror. And one of our jobs is to remind them that no, their horror was justified. The eight year old who's horrified at eating a hamburger, that's a legitimate response. That's a justified response. The 18 year old, the 28 year old who eats the hamburger as if there's no consequences for the environment, for them, or for animals, that's the mistake. - This is my bunny. Her name's Charlotte, and my mom's friend and my friend named Nina gave it to me. And this is very special to me because it only has one foot and I'm on a mission to find it's other foot. Somebody has it. And I just have to find its foot. Because, like, I don't think it's right to just have one foot. - She told me about how the bunny, it wasn't like a natural bunny, it had been, like ran through the mill, but she really was interested in it. And then when she brought it home and showed me it, and it was kinda ugly, but (laughs). But it has character that it made sense to me as far as what animals go. That not all of them look the same, but they all need love in their own way. She's just a sweet girl. Just a sweet girl, yeah. - I don't feel that I shouldn't love her just because she has one foot. All animals should be loved. They shouldn't be tortured. Charlotte is awesome because each time I'm crying or sad, she's always there for me. And if I need a pal, she'll be there. - One day I was nursing my baby, and she came and she looked at her sister when I was nursing, and she said Mom, where do we get milk? I said oh man, I'm going vegan today. I already knew it was going to happen, it was a wrap. So we went vegan that day. From that point on, we never looked back. But I did look back a couple times for a chocolate bar and she caught me. So when she caught me with the chocolate bar, she said Mom, she put her hand on her hip, I said uh oh, I'm about to get lectured. She said if you can't handle it, I can. Don't think you have to go vegan just because I am. She goes, I can do it on my own. - Don't ever underestimate your own voice. When you speak with kindness and sincerity, people will listen. And every single leaflet that Genesis or I hand out has a potential to change one person's life forever. So don't ever forget, we just gotta plant as many seeds as humanly possible. Some of them will grow, some of them will not, but we just gotta keep fighting, keep being out there, keep educating the masses. You cannot get the truth from a corporation. We have to hit the streets, provide the information, and people will respond to this message of kindness. So if she can get this, how can adults not get it? And that's why I'm so inspired by her. On her first day of school, she wore a Love Animals, Don't Eat Them t-shirt. And her mother asked her after her first day of school did they, did kids make fun of you or say anything during lunch? And Genesis says yeah. And her mom was like well, what did they do? She's like, oh well they waved hot dogs in my face, they rubbed salami on my cheeks. And her mom is like well, did you cry? And Genesis is like yeah, I cried. And then her mom is like, did you cry 'cause they were making fun of you? And Genesis was like oh, no. I cried 'cause they didn't understand they're hurting animals. The average person eats about 7,000 animals in their lifetime if you include fish. So just spending 10 minutes handing out those hundred leaflets, that's gonna save over the course of time thousands of animals from a life of horror we couldn't even begin to imagine. But every day, we go out and leaflet, hand out a few thousand leaflets. We're getting tons of people to go vegan, others to go vegetarian. We're getting people to be aware of these issues, a first step. That's why the first step of any revolution is education. And that's what me and Genesis do all the time. - At first, I wasn't really for it, just 'cause I know some adults can be very rude to children and adults, vice versa. But as she did it and her mom's with her, I think it's hard to be mean to a child like that. I just kind of have a trust that they kind of see a light in her. That maybe it might happen to other people, but I just don't think it would happen to her. Otherwise I wouldn't have her do it. It's just that she has, she's so, she opens up people. She makes people feel comfortable. So even the person that planned on being mean or usually is rude, they, it's a weird thing that they're nice to her. She's just, she's just like her name, the beginning. Just Genesis. She's something new, something that we haven't seen before. (laughs) It's just you don't see the stuff that she does. I've never seen kids do those things. So I'm comfortable with it, yeah. I'm comfortable with it. - When kids are young, they say I want to be so and so when I get older. Well, I want to be Genesis when I get older. 'Cause (laughs). Because just her spirit and her compassion and to wake up every day and see her here at my house, it's just awesome. And to see how it spreads out to the whole family, everybody has a lot of compassion for animals, for other humans, for homeless, like we'll even see homeless people and my little boy will cry if we can't give him a dollar. And you know, it's all started with Genesis just reminding us that we need to be a little more compassionate, not just to other humans or to our family members, but to everyone else in the world, including animals. - Children have a natural connection with other animals. And then as time goes, we become acculturated to accept certain things that don't feel right. We come to believe that it's okay for cruelty to become normal. And we become adulterated in a sense. Instead of following our instincts and our humane intuition and our natural empathy. And so I think holding onto that childhood perspective and connection with animals and nature is very valuable, and it's a beautiful thing when children who are young and hold onto that continue with it throughout their life. (car starts) - I knew that something wasn't right. I knew that I wasn't drinking like other people. I was passing out, getting alcohol poisoning, blacking out, getting sick, drinking before school, things that normal 10th graders don't quite do. I had a lot of trauma in my life, and I think that's a common thread with people that develop some substance abuse problems. The divorce and not having a present father, and our family was ripped apart. Alcohol, that was the elixir that helped kind of make things feel a little bit better. I would go into 7 Elevens and stores like that and literally steal the alcohol from the coolers, put it down my pants and then go drink the alcohol by myself behind the building. After high school, I started taking trips to south Florida, Miami, South Beach more, and I started getting into heavier drugs on a regular basis. (crowd cheers) After that year or so, I started getting more into cocaine, and by the time I was 25, I was a daily drinker and user and cigarette smoker and very unhealthy. And I honestly should not be here right now. I should be dead. I did almost overdose many times. I've been in nasty car accidents where the people have come to the scene of the accident and they've seen the vehicle and they've said you don't need to go to the hospital? I've committed felonies that I've gotten away with plenty of times. I just acted very immorally and very recklessly and I just didn't care. I didn't care. It was almost like it was a cry for help. I was just like save me. (rain falling) I called my brother and I called him in the middle of the night, and I was crying to him on the phone. And apparently I said that I needed help. I still to this day don't recall that, but that's what he said, and I believe him. I love my brother to death, and so I went to go visit, and my sister was there, my brother was there, my sister in law was there, my mother was there, and my little niece was there. And we were sitting around and talking, and then all a sudden, the tone kind of changed a little bit. And I think it was my mom who said well, the real reason we wanted to all get together today and talk to you is we wanted to talk to you about your problem that you have. And so I was there with all my loved ones and they all went around the room and told me how I've affected them, which I didn't think I did. I thought I'm only affecting myself. This is my life, let me do what I want, you do what you want. I didn't realize, that's the selfishness and self-centeredness of this affliction. So they all went around and told me, and I was blown away. And they said we'll help you if you help yourself. So I checked myself into a 28-day rehab. You know, like they say a huge tree can grow from a tiny mustard seed, and that's where I began. People want to ask me so many questions about ultra running or being vegan or this and that. It's like, it's really simple. It's just simple, you know? It's just about the love, really. And that's really the void that was filled. (applause) - Great job, buddy. - Ha ha, wow. (cheers) Hi Goose. Hi big boy. How are you? It was such a nice surprise to see him come up to me. His whole body was, it wasn't just like his tail was wagging. It was like his whole body was just wiggling back and forth. And, oh, it just really warmed my heart. The relationship between dogs and humans is quite profound. I didn't have the responsibility to have my own pets in the past. So the time was right now to get a dog. And to be a vegan, you realize more and more how much animals have been used as commodities. We don't need to use them for money. Realizing that this animal has such feelings and such love. You think just dogs are like that? Or other animals too? Are cows like that? Are pigs like that? You know? So that was quite a shift for me. Hey Jen. - Hey Yassine, how's it going? - Good, how are you? - Good how was the race? - Oh, it was really fun, but it was tough. - I'm sure you killed it. - I'm looking forward to a float, definitely. - Awesome, the tank is all ready. You're in floatarium, you can head on up. - Sweet, thank you. - You're welcome. - See you in a bit. - See ya. (phone rings) (water running) (garage door opens) (engine starts) - Ever since I jumped into the cab of that truck and started driving it, it's actually, it's pretty cool. I feel pretty bad-ass. It's a very big truck and it's very heavy as well. So it's not just the size of it, but to brake takes awhile, cause it's like 13,000 pounds. It's kind of cool getting up there and driving this big ol' truck. We live in the wine country. So this is our bread and butter around here. And there's so many wineries. I don't think anyone's ever physically counted them. There's too many to count. And so when you're looking at that big of a presence with wineries, it's just important to utilize the resource there. I mean, why not? This stuff is really good. So the best thing for me, and that's why I change up my menu all the time is to just get in the kitchen and say I wonder what this will be like if I added this to it. And this whole wrap that vegan food has had about being tasteless, you know, is just a bad wrap. People say to me all the time oh, I've had vegan food. It's not very good. I'm like yeah, me too. I've had bad vegan food too. I've had bad pizza. If you care, I think, that the food is good. I really care that not only the food is good but it's knee-buckling. That it's exceptional and it's, you know, if I'm making something, I'll taste it and like, yeah this is really good, but my knees aren't buckling yet. I need something to go ah, yes. - I think that people just need to come out and try it. The word vegan, they think fake. And it's not. And the taste is just out of this world. And a lot of people say once they eat it they're like I don't even need to go out and have that hamburger from that place after I've eaten her food. - Yeah. - I mean, to get over the idea that it's a fake food because it's not. - And I would say too that a lot of people have this impression that, oh, she's a vegan or he's a vegan. They eat carrots, right? Like, no, food. Real and good food. And you don't have to be vegan to come out and try vegan food. - [Voiceover] I noticed this older gentleman with his veteran's hat and all his pins, looking a little out of place, a little uneasy. With I'm not sure I recognize half the food on the menu. What is this? I'm not, you know, a little unease, a little unease there. - I know you told me not to tell Dad that it was vegan. - [Voiceover] But the daughter urging him on, usually you gotta get a partner in crime there. - No, I've never tried vegan food before. Thank you. - [Voiceover] Enjoy. - I have a general idea. It's non-meat. Basically. It's pretty good. She was really worried today for me coming here about vegan. And told me to eat something at home. Well I didn't, and I thought, you gotta have something. And I'm quite surprised. It was very good. It is very good. I will finish it. I could use a napkin. - In the evening, when I go by, and I'm just walking by their table really quick, and the daughter grabs my arm and pulls me over to the table and she's like I gotta tell you, he's never had vegan food before and he loved it. And it's just like, it makes my heart proud. Because now, vegan food is accessible, you know? It's not a weird, out there thing. (car pulling up) (laughing) Come on. - As far as being an animal lover, it was nothing that, at the time we first met that it was, anything that was out there. But now that she has a vegan food truck, she does a lot of events for the SPCA and other organizations like that. And donates to their cause. (baby talk) My wife's a vegan, so that means no leather products, no leather shoes, no leather belts, no leather handbags, nothing that's derived from animals whatsoever. And at first, when she brought this up, especially being a vegan, because of my ignorance of diet at the time, you're thinking okay, where're you getting your protein? Where are you getting your calcium? Where are you getting all these vitamins and things like that? And it turns out nature in the plant form provides all that stuff. You just have to eat a well-balanced diet. - If you're wondering about am I gonna get enough protein, go out to the nearest rural area, pick the biggest bull you can find. Or go to a race track, find the biggest, strongest stallion you can see. Go to the zoo, look for the tallest giraffe, the biggest elephant. All those animals got those rippling muscles entirely from plant foods. Those are vegans. So yeah. Now a pussycat is a meat-eater, so it's not like eating a lot of meat is going to make you big. You get plenty of protein from plants. Research is now clearly showing that a plant-based diet beats every other diet. And the federal policy makers are taking notice of that. - If Jerry's cooking a plant-based diet, I have no problem with that. 10 years ago, I would've gone out to the store and bought some meat to add onto it, but not anymore. Now that I'm starting to understand that you can get all these nutrients, you can get the protein, you can get everything you need from plant-based diet, the fears go away. - The dietary guidelines for Americans are re-formulated every five years to be the blueprint for what you're supposed to eat. That means every kid in school, every food assistance program, really every nutrition program is supposed to adhere to the dietary guidelines for Americans. They're a big deal. In the year 2000, we sued the US Department of Agriculture because we found that six of the 11 members of the committee had financial ties to the meat industry, the milk industry, the egg industry. We won that lawsuit. That opened up the process dramatically, and ever since then, the guidelines have gotten better and better and better. - To run a business, you can't be, you can't be sitting on your butt all day being tired. So you have to have a balanced diet, and I think by her being a vegan, by having a plant-based diet, her energy levels are higher. - [Woman] Okay. (country music fiddle) (mouth harp) (yelping) - I'm amazed. Renee, she puts her mind on something and she goes for it. Since she started this, I haven't got to visit very much because she's been so overwhelmed, but I've been following her on Facebook, and it's been very interesting. I think, I'm impressed. Good for her, that's wonderful. You know why? I can't claim to be a vegan by any means, but she has inspired me to change my way of looking at things. And she has opened my eyes to some things that I did not know existed. They were trained gentle with kindness. They have no fear. A lot of people go to their pasture for a horse, and they run the other way. (laughs) They don't want you to be around them. These guys, they're okay with it. They're family, most definitely. Most definitely. I've had him 23 years, and he'll die on the property. I mean, he'll be here until he grows old and sees his last day. Won't ya? He was an accident. He wasn't on purpose, but we love him just the same. - Here we go, Herman! (country music fiddle) - We heard about what Renee was doing out here for these animals. And when the opportunity came up, I knew she had all of this going on. It was kind of a time crunch, but I felt like I had to be a part of it, really. She's doing a good thing out here, you know? And any time that you get an opportunity to do something like this, you know, I try to jump on it. Yeah, I'm sure we're probably gonna hang around to watch. Yeah, we've put a lot of time and effort into this, and this is going to be his home. And it'll make us feel really good to see him happy in it. β™ͺ Oh Herman, oh Herman, we love you so much β™ͺ We see your soul behind your eyes β™ͺ We know you had it rough β™ͺ Oh Herman, oh Herman β™ͺ We love you so much β™ͺ We see your soul behind your eyes β™ͺ We know you had it rough β™ͺ - What resonates with me with Renee is that she, you see the motto on my shirt. That's the motto of this shelter. Every animal matters, every single one. And for her, that is this personified. - [Renee] Look. Houdini's meeting him for the first time. Aww! (laughs) - [Man] He's already trying to convert me. Alright, Renee, I'm gonna get out of here. - Thank you for everything. I appreciate you. - No problem, no problem. - So much. - [Man] I'll be back here on Monday, take care of a few little things, okay? - [Renee] Thank you. You know you wouldn't be doing this project if you weren't gonna go vegan. So, do your research. - [Man] You got it. (laughs) - None of us had any options for this pig. She was this pig's way out. And I just learned that he apparently went into his house this morning at 9:30 and the gates opened here at 10. That's a beautiful story. - If you are here to be part of the show and watch the entertainment and the speakers, they only way we're going to know you're here is if you're in the front. Alright? I know we got vendors out there and that's important, but we want to see who's here for a moment. I know, right? No 231? 232? 233. 234. You got 234? Alright, you won! Alright, come on (laughs). 97 people showed up to buy tickets. And with those 97 people, we raised about $8,300. I had people puttin' thousand dollars in my hand, cash. I had people puttin' hundred dollar bills in my hand. You know, just me, walkin' around not to mention what happened in the office. Not to mention what happened afterwards. I mean there's just, there was an outpouring. (fiddle music) (tambourine) - I'm a surgeon, but I specialize in weight loss. So I do weight loss surgery and medical weight loss diets, and I teach people plant-based diets. The vegan diet works for diabetes, heart disease, cancer. What, do I have a bug in my hair? They don't even want to kill bugs, so. And it's just been, yeah, you know, it's just changed the way I treat people in medicine. It's my first line of treatment. Our number one cause of death is heart disease. Heart disease is completely preventable. You do not have to have heart disease, even if you're genetically pre-disposed to it. If you eat a plant-based diet, you won't, or especially vegan diet, you're very unlikely to get a, get heart disease. Same with diabetes, same with certain types of cancer. Same with obesity. This is all can be cured with diet. (cow moos) Children are not really attracted to eating meat. That's something that we kind of push on children. And we let them choose whatever they want. And pretty soon they decided they didn't want to eat animals. When they figured out, this one was like, isn't it weird that there's a chicken out in the farm and there's a chicken that you eat? And I was like, no, well they're the same thing. She's like they're the same thing? And then that was, that was it for eating chicken. - We are a animal farm sanctuary, becoming the first ever beef cattle ranch to transition to a vegan farm sanctuary in the state of Texas. (cheers) So it doesn't surprise me that we don't have hundreds of people here today, honestly. (laughs) But you know, it's coming. Oh you just wait. It's coming. Texas consciousness is waking up. And what's really cool is these fine folks, I was talking to Joy the other day, and I was telling her what we do. And she said to me Renee, we have cows here. Texas longhorns. Sometimes the cows, the little babies would go to FFA kids and they'd fall in love with these cows. And if they go to auction, which most of them do, they do get sold and they do go to slaughter. So we are going to get to adopt Frosty. And Frosty is going to be our first ever Texas longhorn here. He'll be out here in the pasture with Herman and the rest of the rowdy bunch. (applause) - As she started making a sanctuary, I started reflecting back about my whole life and the way I thought about animals. And I was kind of relieved, because now that, I was thinking wow, if this works, I can have a bunch of pet cows and I don't have to take 'em to market. And Renee would say they're not pets, they're individuals. And I said okay, we can have a bunch of individuals. Bullseye, how you doin' girl? How you doin'? How you doin', girl? - I wanted to go to a slaughterhouse and I wanted to see exactly what was happening there. And I wanted to do a little bit of filming. And so, I asked a friend of mine, a close physician friend of mine actually, who I knew his uncle was a general manager of a large slaughterhouse. I asked him, just, I thought they would say no. But I asked anyways, if there was any possibility I could do that, and to my surprise, they said yes. Prior to being slaughtered, the animals were so desperately fighting for their lives. They were so moving around violently and jerking around that when they were supposed to be killed, they were really not even killed. Many times, they were just injured or weakened. Actually, that's what I saw that happened most of the times with the cows. That they would hit the captive volt more so down the neck instead of in the head because probably because of the reason that it's not easy to hit them in a strategic point with those conditions. And so the animals would fall to the ground. And they would put the shackle in the hind leg. And now these animals were still alive, the cows were still completely alive. And they were even making movements with her. They weren't as strong to walk off and leave the place, but they were still making movements, and they were still conscious, and their eyes were wide open. And then the slaughterhouse worker would put the shackle and they would be hanging by their hind leg and then a worker would come up to like a platform so that he would be at the same level as the cow. And then he would get close to the cow, and then he would cut off the legs of the cow. From the knee down, the three legs except for the leg from where she was hanging from. And then the three legs would fall to the floor. And then he would come close to her again and lift up the tail of the cow, and from the very tip of the tail, he would make a vertical incision. I don't know how deep or superficial, but a vertical incision, and then put the object down. And then he would pull the skin of the, pull the skin of the cow down so that the cow's own skin was hanging next to her own head on both sides of her head. And then he would make an incision in her neck and then blood would come gushing out. And she would start choking on her own blood. And then eventually, she would die. (moo) I went to the holding areas. First of all, I saw that these animals were really really terrified. And somehow, they all knew what was going on because they would start walking back and being afraid of us, even in the holding areas, 'cause somehow they sensed that something wasn't right. I think, I think. But at the end of the holding areas visit, I saw some of the cows were housed individually, some of them were housed like in very large groups. I'm not sure why, but at the end, there was a cow that housed, there was housed individually. This was a huge, beautiful, completely white cow. And she was terrified. Like you could see that she was really really anxious. She was really afraid. I have a feeling that somehow they know. I don't know why they would know, but maybe they can smell the blood, 'cause it was right adjacent to the slaughterhouse. So maybe they can smell it, or I don't know. But she was really nervous. And we were at the end of the visit, so I asked the guy who was giving me the tour if you want to call that or the visit, was with me, and I asked him if I could stay there with the cow. So he stayed with me, and we were talking with the cow for about 15 or 20 minutes. I was, he was just standing there. But she calmed down, and I was even petting the cow, and she really calmed down, and she was in much better conditions. But then the next day, when I went to the actual slaughter facility, and when I was filming all these horrible things that I just told you, it came the turn, of all of the cows, it came the turn of that white, beautiful cow to go through slaughter. And it was so much harder because the fact that this white cow wasn't, she didn't even fight back like the other cows. She could smell the blood, she could hear the other cows. She knew exactly what was going on, but for some reason, I think she thought that I was going to help her. Because she came, she even like positioned herself, like they didn't have to shove her in too much. The workers were, like, shoving the other cows and the other cows were jumping, I mean getting on their hind legs. They were trying to crawl the wall, and this white cow, she just went straight up to me, 'cause I was about half a meter away from where their heads were with my camera. And she walked straight up to me, and she was just staring at me. And the other workers were pushing her and then the door, the metal door closed behind her. And even with all of that, she was not fighting back. All she was doing was with her eyes wide open, she was standing still and she was staring at me. She wasn't even blinking. Like, she was begging for me to help her. Somehow, she probably sensed that I didn't, you know, for her, for this to happen. And obviously I didn't want this to happen. Obviously. But it was so hard, 'cause she was just imploring for me to help her, and there was absolutely nothing I could do. (rainfall) - Don't give up. You just gotta focus and find some comfort within the discomfort. Today we're gonna work on some lateral movements. Speed skaters, okay? We're gonna go to the side, alternating legs. Okay? In five, four, three, two, one, go! Get a nice T position. And hold 'em out. Four minutes, beginning now. When those little voices start coming into your head, they tell you to quit, tell you to give up, just like in life when it gets tough, you don't give up. You can override that. Push past, come out on the other side. - One, two, three! (screams) - I met Yassine in Ithaca, New York. This quirky little town where I was on the faculty at Cornell. And Yassine was living with his brother and sister in law kind of on the outskirts of the city. And he came to one of my yoga classes. I was teaching yoga at the time, and that was the beginning. He kept coming back to the classes and he was really bad at yoga (laughs). And he would come to the meditation classes as well and he was worse at that because he needed like 10 props, blankets, pillows. My teacher spent like 20 minutes just getting him comfortable because his body is so tight. He had long, wavy hair in a ponytail and he was kinda bigger than he is now. And I started to think wow, this guy keeps coming to these classes and he's really bad at it. I wonder if he likes me. We went away on a honeymoon to Costa Rica before we got married, and then right after we got married, we went to the farm sanctuary in upstate New York and we stayed overnight there. And we had an amazing experience connecting with the animals. I also remember going on a vacation with him to some South American country, and they asked him why don't you eat meat? They didn't ask me, but for the man not to be eating meat in this South American country was really weird, and so Yassine said because I don't want to hurt animals. And the waiters laughed at him. And I thought that that was just so authentic and brave of Yassine to show that empathy to others. I think it was a big moment for him because it was one of the first times he had been challenged or asked why. And he didn't, at that time, didn't say all the health benefits. His immediate response was because of the animals. And that's really representative of the kind of person that he is. - Not only are our runners vegan, but they're actually performing at a high level. I think that it's out there on the table now that you do get enough protein. That's not a question anymore. Us vegan runners kind of stick together and kind of know of each other, and are kind of proud of each other when we do perform on a high level on a big stage. (knocking) One thing I really do enjoy is cooking for vegans and non-vegans in my home and seeing their eyes light up about how good it is and how full they feel. Because I think a lot of people have a misconception. They feel like they're not going to get satiated or they're not going to be filled up because they don't have a big hunk of meat to fill their belly. I love when people come over and they're just like wow, that was an amazing dish. Oh, I feel so good and it was all plant-based. Hey before we start eating I want to make a toast. I really want to thank you guys for coming over and cheers to everybody. Good luck this weekend. - [All] Yeah, cheers. - Run strong. After dinner, the night before a race, I love to go out for a nice, slow shakeout run with my friends. - The first time I met Yassine was a 50 mile race just outside of Seattle called the White River 50 Miler, and I was running along, and all of a sudden this guy comes up to me and he starts talking my ear off, like hey I went vegan, you really inspired me. And he was just going nuts and like, who is this guy? And at the same time, I'm like wow, he's really got an energy to him. And he, I thought would drop off eventually, but he just hung with me for the next five miles up this brutal climb, and he had as much energy in his voice as he did in his heart and lungs. Yassine is just one of those charismatic runners, ultra runners. Where, we're an interesting and odd bunch, but we also kind of, like, you know, we can pick up wherever we left off, and I think that's the beauty of our sport as well as a vegan diet. Again, we're connected by a certain thread, and that is running and being vegan. So it's always great to come back and just hang out and hang out as buddies as if nothing, as if no time has really passed. We're just the same individuals at the core. So in 1999, I'm lined up for my first western states 100 mile race, probably the biggest race I was competing in in my life. And I just transitioned to a vegan diet that winter. And there's still doubts in my head. Can this really work for me? And I was thinking, I probably need to eat some meat. Here, even a week up to the race. And after I won that race on a plant-based diet, there was no looking back. And never doubted myself and went on to win seven consecutive western states 100 mile races. - Scott Jurek was the pioneer vegan runner, and now we're starting to hear more and more it being more mainstream. Last year Scott, after running the Appalachian Trail, which is over, like 2,000 miles across 14 states, covering elevation changes of 500,000 feet, broke the Appalachian Trail record by over three hours. There are a lot of parallels of ultra-marathoning and becoming vegan. You don't just jump right into it. Sometimes you need to find that community, you need to try it out for, I tell people to try it out for at least a month to give it some time for your body to adapt to a different cuisine, different diet. Your body's not quite used to it. It takes a few weeks for the human body to adapt to things, that's usually why they tell people to go to rehabilitation, for example, for 28 days. Is so their body can adapt to the new lifestyle. Oh, you just want your belly rubbed, don't you? You just want your belly rubbed. (child laughs) There's definitely a correlation between the spiritual practice of non-harming and veganism. And the way I'm living today compared to the way I used to live. The way I used to live was very harmful to myself, to my body, to my loved ones. Essentially, I'm trying to live a more spiritual life. And for me, that involves trying to cause as little suffering as possible. And to try to just do my best. And this is very much an alignment with how I'm living today, and how I want to live. - This idea of eating animal product. Nothing more harmful than that shit. What's more harmful than destroying the planet and taking all the resources and then poisoning yourself? You know, the first Chakra, don't poison yourself, right? Take care of self so you can serve the planet. So the first thing you do is you poison yourself because the way animal product is being manufactured, for one. Aside from the fact that plant-based diet is safer and healthier no matter what. But the way they make the animal product. The way it's born into, talk about suffering. 100 billion animals made to be born into suffering. So yeah, we don't want to cause any harm. So if we really examine ahimsa, it's meaning, or if we want to be people who practice ahimsa or cause less harm, the one thing we shouldn't do, I mean the first and most important things we should do is get away from eating animal products. - [Genesis] You can do whatever you want. - You can create any world you want when you're painting, right? Nothing's wrong when you're painting. See this little vine over here? You can make a monkey anywhere you want. Genesis, what's your favorite? - A pig. - [Man] A pig? - Mhmm. - [Man] So you guys know what abstract art means? - [Genesis] Uh, no. - Art For Animal's Sake's mission is to teach art classes with an animal empathy theme. So we try to instill compassion for animals through art projects. And the reason we use art, it gives youth especially a meaningful way of looking at the issues that we're talking about. So we try to get kids to come to their own conclusions about animals and how they should be treated. Somebody once famously said if you gave a kid a bunny rabbit and an apple, they're going to eat the apple and play with the bunny rabbit, you know? So it just sort of, like, this thing gets knocked out of us as we get older. One of the projects that we did was a lantern project. And basically, protesting an animal experimentation lab. And so we just made these beautiful hand-made lanterns. We had over 280 people from across the United States ship them to us, and we put them in a public place, and people saw these lanterns, and they gravitated to it because it was such a beautiful display. And they said what is this all about? And we said well actually, every one of these lanterns represents one of these animals that is going to be experimented on in this lab that they're going to be building soon. And so by putting something beautiful in the world and enticing a conversation, I think brings people in instead of revolting them or putting them on the defensive. With Genesis and her age group, I think they're really benefiting from this age, because the information's out there, and it's whether they want to recognize it, they want to see it, and she has become such a good spokesperson because she has a strong feeling, but she also sort of has the background and the education, whether she's gotten it on her own or through her parents, to put it into practice. And it think that's why she's become such a powerful spokesperson at this age. Because people see the innocence but they also see the maturity and the intellectual maturity that she brings to the subject. And it's really hard to talk to a kid and have them say these things that are so basic and so unfiltered and refute it. You just can't. - He was spending the night one night. And he was like what are we going to eat, because you guys are vegan? And we were like, well, what do you like? He said I like meatball subs, so we said well, we'll serve you that. So then, I was talking to him about veganism, and then my mom made his sandwich, he ate it, and he's like mmm this is really good. So then after that, he left, and then his mom called back, he's like, Tahir wants to go vegan now. And that was the happiest thought I've ever thought. - David Carter, NFL defensive lineman. 300 pound vegan. - Genesis Butler, quarterback. 75 pound vegan. (intense fanfare music) - I'ma crush you like a little bug. But I don't crush bugs, 'cause I'm vegan. - Got insurance? Because you gonna need it. (crowd cheers) - What the? Doesn't make no sense. Hey good game, Genesis. - [Genesis] Thanks. Those were just some of my basic moves. Next time, I'll show you my real moves. - [David] You know, you talk a lot of trash. - These boys challenged me to a push off, and my mom sent me in this cute, little white sparkly blouse. And then her boys did like, 10 push ups, and then, like, oh I can't take anymore. And then I'm like, okay, so I can do more. I did 100 push ups. And then I come home, my shirt's all dirty. It's all like black and my mom's like what happened? I'm like, I did push ups, and I did it on the blacktop. And she's like next time, scoot over to the grass a little bit. And she had to throw it away. It was just. - Ah man. I feel sorry for those boys. It must have been a real shot to their ego, huh? When I first started going vegan, I met this 72 year old guy. His name is Viktoras Kulvinskas, and I was doing like a hundred push ups and I thought I was doing a lot. Or for me, that's what I thought at that time was a lot. But he was doing 200 push ups. At 72 years old, at one time. So that was like our little competition. And now I'm doing like, 500 push ups. So they were messing with you, huh? All the guys thinking that 'cause you were vegan you couldn't do push ups? And you beat 'em, you bettered 'em. Yeah, that happened to me. See, everyone was thinking because I was going vegan that I was going to be all weak and small and stuff and never be able to play again. But I did lose some weight. I got down to 265, but then I put on another 40 pounds of solid muscle, and now I'm stronger than all of 'em. So, vegan is clearly the best way to go. You know that, too. And those little boys that you beat in the push up contest, they know that too now. Oh, so, another thing your mom told me about was the football game where you showed up in ballerina shoes? - Oh, so. I came from a circus protest. And we thought it was my brother's game. So it was going to be alright, he was in his jersey. He was ready. I come, my team's all like, come on, where were you? I'm like, and then I had my save the elephants shirt on, I had everything on. All my protest stuff. So then, they make this 12 alligator rule. It was like, five alligator first. So now it goes up to 12, because I was pulling flags like that. - I remember when I was playing Pop Warner, it was, the defensive line had to wait five alligators before we could go rush the quarterback. So they had, they pushed it up because of you to 12 alligators? - Like, we were supposed to do for five alligators. One alligator, two alligator, three alligator, all the way to five. So then they pushed it up to 12. So that's like, half of the game. The game's almost over. - Genesis, count two more alligators! - Hike! - One alligator, two alligator, tree alligator, four alligator, five. So then I do 12 alligators. - [Man] Go get 'em! - But I still catch their flags. So couldn't do nothing about it. - [David] So they tried to cheat to stop you from stickin' them, taking their flags. And they still ended up looking bad? - There was some big guys, too. - [David] Man, how many touchdowns did you score that game? - Five to zero. - So the score was five to zero? Who scored all those? You scored all those touchdowns? So you scored (laughs). You scored, and this is all boys, right? You're playing against all boys. - I'm the only girl. - All meat eaters and you're the only girl and you're the only vegan and you score all the touchdowns. And they had to push the alligators up to 12, from five alligators to 12 alligators? Just to stop you from snatching all the flags. Man, shoot, you're doing a better job than me with all this football stuff. That's right, girl. (om chanting) - [Genesis] We shall overcome. We shall overcome. We shall overcome someday. Oh, deep in my heart, I do believe. We shall overcome someday. - [Two Children] We'll walk hand in hand. - We'll walk hand in hand. We'll walk hand in hand. We'll walk hand in hand someday. Deep in my heart, I do believe, we shall overcome someday. - You are not alone. You are not alone. You are not alone today. Deep in my heart I do believe we shall overcome someday. We shall overcome. - [Boy And Girl] We shall overcome. We shall overcome someday. Deep in my heart, I do believe, we shall overcome someday. (slow piano ballad) - I also don't like to use the word typical vegan. I don't know what a typical vegan is anymore. I don't know if there's such a thing. I think that sort of '70s version of the tree-hugging, crystal-powered, Birkenstock-wearing unicorn rider is sort of nonsense and has been for a long time. - I left home right after college, and I ended up walking actually all the way from New England to Tennessee. And ended up in Tennessee at a community called The Farm, which at that time was the largest hippie commune in the world. It was almost 1,000 people there, and they were all vegetarians. In fact, we would today call them vegans. No one heard of the word vegan in 1975. - I fought competitively for many many years. I still train and I, there's nothing more satisfying than getting into the ring with a guy who's 20 years younger than I am and just completely handing him his ass. - Nine years later, I shaved my head, and for the second time in my life, I found myself in a community that was vegan. This was Songgwangsa Zen monastery in South Korea. And I went there and became a Zen monk with the idea of doing an intensive meditation. And I realized though that these people in this monastery had been living what we would call a vegan way of living for 750 years. - I can remember one of my old coaches who was super traditional, he was about a thousand years old, old Chinese guy, who used to say you gotta be more aggressive, you gotta eat more meat, you know. You gotta eat more meat and be more aggressive. - So there was no meat, no dairy, no eggs, no wool no silk, no leather. Even mosquitoes, you wouldn't just, you know, kill. You would put 'em outside. - And then at the same time, he would sit us all down for two hour meditations and say walk the middle path and embrace freedom and balance. Now get in there and kick that guy's ass and bring home a trophy for the school. - The whole idea was that if we want to evolve in consciousness and become more awake, then the fundamental most important thing is kindness to others. - And it's that same sort of cognitive dissonance that says I can pet my dog and love my Golden Retriever and then I can eat a double bacon cheeseburger. And it simply never made sense to me. - We are all interconnected. The interconnectedness of life is the fundamental spiritual teaching, and from understanding that more deeply, we liberate ourselves as we liberate others. - We are all on this crazy rock flying through the universe, and we're in it together. And I know it sounds a little crystal-powered, but it's really the only thing that we know for sure, which is that we're all adrift in a sea of chaos, you know? And the mountain is not there, and me and the trees are here. I am the trees and I am the mountain, and we are all on the rock together. And that is the more sublime change that happens after one realizes that we can't slaughter and eat our fellow earthlings. - The whole idea of veganism is really a social transformation but also a personal transformation based on waking awakening out of the delusion of being a fundamentally separate self and competing with others to get something. Rather to see that as we bless others, we are blessed. (piano music) - Four Amys with no cheese. That would be completely vegan? - [Worker] Um, yeah, but we also could do four vegan Amys. I can do them with vegan cheese. - Oh, okay, well actually you know what? I think I'm fine without the cheese, vegan or not, but that, wow, that's great. That's good to know. - [Worker] So four Amys with no cheese? - Four Amys, no cheese. And then I need two non-dairy chocolate and two non-dairy strawberries. - Back in the day in 1970, when I first became a vegan, you know, a lot of those veggie meats, I won't name the brand 'cause they're good people that tried hard, but they were, I'm not sure if that veggie meat was good for your body, but it certainly wasn't good for your soul. It was just kind of like, well I'm just going to eat this anyway. That was kind of the inner-monologue like whenever you would eat some of that stuff. But it got so much better over the years, and now you can go to any restaurant, they have vegan dishes, you know, nearly any restaurant has that. And they're delicious and people realize just 'cause you're a vegan doesn't mean you don't like flavor. Garlic is just fine. Cayenne pepper is just fine. Ginger is wonderful. Put some flavor into it, and that's what I do when I cook. I make a number of wonderful dishes. Spicy Thai basil eggplant I make, I make a wonderful curry, I have a chicken with peanut sauce with fake chicken, of course. Trinidad squash, Greek potatoes. I have all these wonderful dishes filled with flavor that people, big meat-eaters that come to my house, they love it. And they begrudgingly go meat-free for the day. But then when it's done, when the meal's done they go you know, I could do this again. I may do this a little more often. - It's exciting. I'm a vegan sitting in a drive-thru ordering a burger and a shake and fries. Very cool. - I didn't fully understand the green aspects of it back in 1970, but by the early '90s I did. It takes so much more land and water and energy to create a pound of beef than it does a pound of broccoli or a pound of grain. So it's the green choice in many ways, land use, energy, water, you name it. - Right now on my truck it says vegan. I'm really considering re-branding into plant-based. 'Cause I am finding that that is more accessible to people. They're, it's the same thing, it's the same food. But unfortunately, I think that over time, vegan has created a whole other layering of meaning, which sometimes can mean militant and people get defensive, like, you know, oh you're going to tell me how to live my life or whatever. - There's no joy in being right about climate change or being a vegan or single-use plastic. Some of these things that we've been talking about for many years, but I would hope that people would be more open to these points of view now that there's been a great success rate about a lot of the things we've been talking about. Right here in LA and in several other cities, solar power is now on a par with the traditional grid power of coal and natural gas and all of that. It's now cost effective to do solar. So that's a big game changer, so now maybe people will be open to these kinds of things and dietary choices that you can make that will be good for the environment and good for your own health. - When I use the term plant-based, I find people just open up. You can just, oh yay, yeah I love plants. That's good, you know? And when I use the term vegan oftentimes, I just see them kind of close up. So it's, hey, I'm going to use what works. I mean, if people are going to be more open to the word plant-based or words plant-based, as opposed to the word vegan, sure. I'll do it. As long as they eat my food, that's all I care about. I don't care how they get there, I just want them to get there. And then understand what it's about. And then the discussion about veganism can hopefully come into play. Baby steps, right? Whatever works. - What do we do as activists that actually reaches people and actually changes the world? Screaming is fun. Throwing fake blood is really satisfying. But it doesn't change the world. It doesn't make the world a better place for animals. It just satisfies our emotional need to scream and throw fake blood, you know? So being a vegan activist and being an animal rights activist, the criteria by which my actions are judged is how effective am I at being an activist for animals? Not how much I enjoy it, not how much I want to scream, 'cause I just want to scream at everybody, but am I making the world a better place through my activism for the animals? (straw slurps) - My grandfather's a butcher. Grew up in Kansas. Meat eating, meat eating, meat eating family. And here it was almost in the middle of the night, and I hear this wailing coming from the barn. It's pouring down rain, and so I put on my big ol' rubber boots and go on down there. (rain falling) and storm's happening outside and it's cold and it's dark. It was an experience like you can't imagine unless you lived through it, I think. I've birthed my own babies. But I'm a little distracted. But here, I'm watching the miracle of life just happen right in front of me. And my hands are right there and I'm in there and I'm actually inside this, this lamb, pulling out the baby. It was just a really beautiful moment. (hopeful music) Watching the baby grow up, you almost feel a connection like I would with a child of my own. It changed me and my thoughts about food. Especially the day that she was killed, I wasn't home. By design. I knew she was going to be. That was the plan from the beginning. That was our structure, that's what we did. And so it was tough that day. But my background has always been this is life. This is the way things are. So my feelings were wrong. I needed to buck it up. I needed to, um, get with the program and stop being so emotional about it. And feed my family, and that was kind of the attitude of things. And so I cooked dinner a short time later using this baby. And cried for days. (soft folk guitar) β™ͺ I'm resonating to the sound β™ͺ Of the spirit in the forest and the streams β™ͺ Vibrating to eternal rhythms β™ͺ Where the mysteries unfold magically β™ͺ - Every year for Thanksgiving, we do a celebration for the turkeys where the turkeys are the guests of honor. The turkeys dig in, they love pumpkin pie. And they stick their face right into it (audience laughs) and splatter it all around. β™ͺ There's a memory of another space in time β™ͺ I'm on my way to soaring into the light β™ͺ - She said Mom, I got the pig, I got the pig. Oh, well good. And she says and I named it Herman. I said oh you did not. After your dad. She said I did too. I said well, it's your pig. β™ͺ Brace your heart, go forth, share the mystery β™ͺ The world's ready now for you to do what you're here to do β™ͺ The planetary signs are in line β™ͺ Girl, you're right on time β™ͺ - Some children want to go vegan, but their mom and dad don't have enough courage to do it. So I'm very very blessed and lucky to have them. And I think these are the best parents that a child could ask for. β™ͺ There's a memory of another space in time β™ͺ I'm on my way to soaring into the light β™ͺ I'm resonating to the sound β™ͺ To the sound β™ͺ To the sound β™ͺ Resonating to the trees, to the breeze, to the waters β™ͺ To the oceans, to the streams, to the sea, β™ͺ To the sound, to the sound β™ͺ Sound β™ͺ - The cage of chickens fell off a transport into Memorial Park and broke open. And all of them but one were killed. One of them had one of their wings ripped off and was lying there mostly dead. β™ͺ To the sound β™ͺ - So I went and picked this chicken up and took her to the shelter, took her to our vets, took her to an avian vet, and she, we fostered her. We named her Isabel and got to know her. It became impossible to ignore that we had to take the next step, and my partner and I had both had brushes with being vegan. We'd been vegetarian for years, but this for us, Isabel's face was on it. β™ͺ To the sound β™ͺ - This isn't a question about eggs, this is a question about Isabel. And that's a really easy answer. β™ͺ (sings in foreign language) β™ͺ - Could you look an animal in its face and simply say to it that your appetite is more important than its suffering? That your desire to eat it is more important than its desire to be alive? - Houdini has fallen in love with Herman the pig. - Oh, yeah. - I was out there earlier, nobody else was around, and they were just nose to nose. I watched them a little while, and they just, I don't know what they were saying to each other, but they were, they were communicating. - To have the experience of somebody that gets dragged to my truck by somebody else generally that understands. And then they try it and it's, it's just so cool. And then they always come to the window. That's why we have the best customers. Because they're always coming to the window after they eat saying thank you for being here. It was so good, things like that. They're just very generous people. It's nice. - I'm 65 years of age, and I ride my bike all over LA still. I'm in great shape, and I've been to my high school reunion, and I can tell you, it's better to be a vegan.
Info
Channel: Northwest VEG
Views: 1,151,145
Rating: 4.8032417 out of 5
Keywords: vegan, vegetarian, plant-based, compassion, animal
Id: V4JwBgaAEmk
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 90min 35sec (5435 seconds)
Published: Sat Jun 18 2016
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