Digital Social Hour - How Big Agriculture Is Draining California’s Water | Kameron Waters DSH #1124
Episode Date: January 19, 2025How is Big Agriculture reshaping California’s water crisis? 💧 In this episode of the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly, we dive deep with Kameron Waters, the mind behind the groundbreaking docu...mentary "Christpiracy." 🌎 Discover how 50% of California’s water is consumed by animal agriculture and the shocking truth about alfalfa farming, commercial fishing, and the smelt fish debate. 🐟🐄 From fires to farming, Kameron unpacks the hidden connections impacting our environment, our ethics, and our future. Wondering what the real cost of animal agriculture is on our planet and communities? 🌱 Kameron shares jaw-dropping insights about factory farming, water usage, and even the spiritual implications rooted in history. Buckle up for an eye-opening conversation packed with compelling stories, from undercover investigations to ancient mysteries. 💥 Don’t miss this thrilling discussion! Tune in now and join the conversation. Watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets. 📺 Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🚀 #environmentalclearance #netflix #animalagricultureethics #documentary #politicalclimate CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:42 - California Fires 04:06 - Dairy Farms Issues 09:19 - Kameron's Vegan Journey 10:21 - Kosher and Halal Practices 14:37 - Slaughterhouse Inmates 16:19 - Humane Mass Slaughter? 19:01 - Jesus and Animal Killing 21:20 - First Slaughterhouse History 24:10 - Temple of Jerusalem Significance 28:10 - Nazarene Movement Overview 29:42 - The Nazarenes Explained 31:02 - Historical Cover-Up Discussion 34:26 - Origins of Animal Agriculture 35:02 - Jesus's Temple Protest 37:09 - Animal Agriculture Subsidies 41:48 - Was Jesus Vegetarian? 47:16 - Karma and Consequences 49:28 - Netflix Censorship Issues 51:30 - Christpiracy Explained 55:39 - Upcoming Debate Preview 58:18 - Kameron and LA Fires Experience 1:00:19 -Kameron's LA Fires Reflection 1:04:11 - Closing Messages APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: jenna@digitalsocialhour.com GUEST: Kameron Waters https://www.instagram.com/kameronwaters SPONSORS: SPECIALIZED RECRUITING GROUP: https://www.srgpros.com/ LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Looking for the ultimate online casino experience?
Step into the BetMGM Casino app, where every deal, spin and goal brings Las Vegas excitement into the palm of your hand.
Take your seat at Premium Blackjack Pro, where strategy meets top-tier gameplay.
Hit the ice with Gretzky Goal Lucky Tap, inspired by the great one himself.
Or play the dazzling MGM Grand Emerald Nights, a slot experience that captures the magic of MGM.
With so many games, it's time to make your move.
Download the app and visit BetMGM Ontario today to experience the next level of gaming.
Visit betmgm.com for terms and conditions, 19 plus to wager, Ontario only.
Please gamble responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact CONNECTS ONTARIO at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge. drop to the final shot, you're always taken care of with the sportsbook Born in Vegas.
That's a feeling you can only get with BetMGM, and no matter your team, your favorite skater,
or your style, there's something every NHL fan is going to love about BetMGM.
Download the app today and discover why BetMGM is your hockey home for the season.
Raise your game to the next level this year with BetMGM, a sportsbook worth a celly, and
an official sports betting partner of the National Hockey League.
BetMGM.com for terms and conditions.
Must be 19 years of age or older to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have any questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please
contact Connex Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
The chicken as a species is like one of the most dominant species on planet Earth
because of the chicken industry. Like pound for pound, there's more chickens and more
chicken as like a being on the planet than any other animal species because we
Breathe them into existence. Dangly
Alright guys, we got Cameron waters here today and just released a big documentary right Christspiracy. It's out
It's finally out.
We went to theaters and now we're digital on our website.
And you exposed a lot there.
You got a lot of threats, which we'll dive into.
First, I wanna start off with the fires though,
cause you have some information pertaining
to the California fires, right?
Right, yes.
So I actually was evacuated from the fires and still am.
I'm down in San Diego, drove there to come visit you today.
And what I've noticed is that the conversation
around the fires, there's so many things
that people are talking about.
And obviously there's the big question marks
that go down the rabbit holes of directed energy weapons,
smart meters, insurance lapsing with the fire protection, you know, insurance lapsing
with the fire protection, et cetera.
The fire hydrant's not having water, right?
But the one thing that I hear a lot,
which people keep quoting is, you know,
Trump talking about the fish, the smelt fish
in Southern California not having water
because of protecting this little smelt fish.
Yeah, I saw that.
Right.
People like Grant Cardone, others saying like,
oh, the environmentalists. They're ruining, California
Because they're trying to protect this little fish, right?
Well, the irony is is that if you look into the environmental organizations that are protecting the smelt fish
It's heavily documented that the commercial fishing industry is trying to protect the smelt fish because it's food for the salmon and the steelhead
trout that they're catching that are going out to the markets that everybody around our
country is eating.
So I believe it's 40% of water is diverted because of the smelt fish to protect the smelt
fish that could be making its way down to Southern California.
But it's not again because the commercial fishing industry
is putting the protection.
So you've got that, then on top of that,
50% of all water that could be utilized
for Southern California is actually going
to animal agriculture, and 80% of all agriculture water,
period, is growing alfalfa in California,
which is the food for animal agriculture.
So we're talking about large amounts of water.
So what I was thinking is like,
it's just kind of ironic with everybody.
I see what's happening, you know,
and by the way, I'm a Christ follower.
I also consider myself more on the conservative spectrum
in terms of my values, but I'm looking at some of my heroes saying like, oh, the environmentalists myself more on the conservative spectrum in terms of my values.
But I'm looking at some of my heroes saying like,
oh, the environmentalists, it's the animal lovers,
it's the vegans, they all want to protect the stupid fish
when the irony is it's the fishing industry
that's causing the fish protection
and it's the animal agriculture industry
that's literally taking 50% or more of the water.
Wow.
And that leads me to wonder like,
is that why we don't have water in the fire hydrants?
And if you look into the public water data,
you see that this has major impact.
The water is all coming from the same place.
So that is crazy.
You've connected some dots I haven't heard yet
on social media.
Yeah, so, you know, obviously there's all the question marks
around the things that everyone else is talking about.
But around this water piece, why wasn't there water
in the fire hydrants?
Again, I don't want the rhetoric to get out there
that it's just environmentalists and people trying
to protect the environment and not caring about humans.
It's actually the exact opposite.
It's people who want to keep the meat and fishing industry
alive.
And the dairy industry,
the dairy consumes all that alfalfa,
80% of all agricultural water to grow alfalfa
to feed dairy cows.
Holy crap.
And that kind of ties into the documentary, right?
Because you went to some of these dairy farms
and you witnessed a lot of interesting things.
Exactly, exactly.
What were some concerning things
you were witnessing at these farms?
Well, first of all, I mean, my backstory is that just I,
I'm the least and last person
to ever really go on this journey.
I was raised Christian and still am a Christ follower,
but I was also a hunter, a fisherman,
and I worked a barbecue restaurant in my teen years.
And I kind of woke up to this right as I was going
into college and I was taking my faith more seriously
and starting a career as a gospel musician.
And that was when I did the Daniel fast,
which is this biblical or scriptural kind of fast
where you eat only vegetables that a lot of Protestants do.
And it's popularized by Rick Warren,
the purpose-driven life guy that wrote that book
and everything.
How long are you supposed to eat vegetables for?
It's either 10 or 21 days,
because in the scripture, it's literally about the-
Looking for the ultimate online casino experience?
Step into the BetMGM Casino app,
where every deal, spin, and goal brings Las Vegas excitement
into the palm of your hand.
Take your seat at Premium Blackjack Pro,
where strategy meets top-tier gameplay.
Hit the ice with Gretzky Goal Lucky Tap, inspired by the great one himself, or play the dazzling MGM
Grand Emerald Knights, a slot experience that captures the magic of MGM. With so many games,
it's time to make your move. Download the app and visit BetMGM Ontario today to experience the next
level of gaming. Visit betmgm.com for terms and conditions.
19 plus to wager, Ontario only.
Please gamble responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
please contact Connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge.
Bet MGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.
Bet MGM is an official sports betting partner of the National Hockey League and has your back
all season long. From puck drop to the final shot, you're always taken care of with a sportsbook
born in Vegas. That's a feeling you can only get with BetMGM, and no matter your team,
your favorite skater, or your style, there's something every NHL fan is going to love about
BetMGM. Download the app today and discover why BetMGM is your hockey home for the season.
Raise your game to the next level this year with BetMGM, a sportsbook worth a celly,
and an official sports betting partner of the National Hockey League.
BetMGM.com for terms and conditions.
Must be 19 years of age or older to wager, Ontario only.
Please play responsibly. If you have any questions or concerns about your gambling or older to wager, Ontario only. Please play responsibly.
If you have any questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact
CONNECT ONTARIO at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario. Shout out to today's sponsor, Specialized Recruiting Group. When your company has a position to fill,
are you really seeing the best candidates?
Sure, you get plenty of resumes,
but you may be missing an untapped resource,
ideal candidates who are not currently job searching,
people who are not actively looking,
but who may be open to the right opportunity.
It could be the difference between a good hire
and a great hire.
Specialized Recruiting Group is ready
to find the talent you need.
Go to srgpros.com, see how our recruitment specialists
with a deep understanding of experience and expertise
you need can find the right fit for your business.
After all, you deserve to see the best candidates possible,
both active and passive.
Whether you're looking for a contract or a direct hire,
specialized recruiting Group is ready
to find the talent you need.
So go to srgprose.com right now to get started.
That's srgprose.com.
Specialized Recruiting Group,
a tailored approach to hiring.
Biblical prophet Daniel and how when he's enslaved
in Babylon, when the Hebrews are taken over,
he refuses to eat the meat that the kingdom of Babylon trying to feed him
and says, just give me vegetables instead.
But everyone's like, oh, you're gonna,
basically I'm paraphrasing, but they're like,
you can't do that because they're probably worried
he's gonna die or they've never seen anyone do that before.
And he essentially says, test me for 10 days
and see how I go up against the rest of the people
in your kingdom.
And after 10 days, he tests wiser, stronger,
and healthier than everyone else in the kingdom.
And there's another 21 day test as well.
Now the funny thing is, is a lot of people will say,
oh, it's just a fast for a period of time.
Daniel was probably gorging on the meat, you know,
and other things outside of that fast.
It was just a religious kind of like period.
But when you look into Josephus,
the ancient Jewish historian,
he gives a clearer picture that Daniel actually abhorred
the eating of living creatures full stop
and that that was just his lifestyle along with his brothers.
So when I was growing up,
I learned Bible stories from popular shows really
like Veggie Tales was one of them.
You know that show?
Did you see it?
Yeah, I remember it.
So I learned the story of Daniel via Veggie Tales,
primarily, that's how I remember.
It was the first VHS tape I ever got as a kid
was Veggie Tales with a Daniel story.
And the irony is, is they tell the story
about Daniel surviving the lion's den
and not getting burned in the fiery furnace
and all these things that made Daniel a superhero for me.
He was like my Marvel comic hero growing up because my mom and my parents were trying
to get me into Bible stories.
But the irony is the vegetables of Veggie Tales didn't tell the part of the story that
he only ate vegetables, which is kind of funny.
So even reflecting since making this film, what we go into is a lot of coverups
around how there is this thread in the scripture
of what the Christ-like way
or how this Nazarene movement viewed ethics towards animals
and just in general, the kind of Edenic plant-based diet
in the scripture and how it threads
through the Bible as well.
And there's this essentially kind of cover-up. And I witnessed it as a kid because I never knew
this aspect of the story until I was old enough to read the Bible for myself. And when I did,
I was like, oh yeah, this, he clearly eats only vegetables. Oh, look, historians say he actually,
this was his full lifestyle. So that sent me down a rabbit hole to really questioning.
But I will say, I was hoping it was gonna be a 10 day test
or a 21 day test.
I was thinking, oh, I'll go back to eating meat,
but I just wanna do it the right way
because around the same time is when my mom actually,
she's an insurance sales lady,
and she came home after auditing a chicken farm
and told me about the battery cages
that the chickens are in.
And I had an ethical conflict because, you know,
as a Christian, I always wanted to help the poor and needy
and people that were in, you know, tough situations.
And when I heard about the tough situations
that these chickens were in, I was like,
okay, well, that doesn't seem like, you know,
most people disagree with factory farming.
So I was like, okay, I feel like, what would Jesus do?
You know, I wear the bracelet still to this day. I love it. WWJ I feel like what would Jesus do? You know, I wear the bracelet still to this day.
I love it.
WWJD bracelets.
What would Jesus do?
That was my question as a kid.
I used to wear the bracelet as a kid.
And I thought he wouldn't do the battery cages.
So what would he do?
And so it sent me on this journey.
Like I want to figure it out.
And that's kind of where Christspiracy was born
and genuinely was trying to find a right way
to actually keep consuming animals.
Yeah. Yeah. And it was a seven year a right way to actually keep consuming animals, yeah.
Yeah, and it was a seven year journey.
So you weren't eating animals that whole seven years?
Well, so the beginning of the story of my full backstory
is a little bit compressed because it's a 90 minute film.
So it's compressed in like a minute or two.
But really it's been a 15 year, probably 15, 16 year journey
for me of completely being off of animal products, full stop altogether.
And then before that, because this goes all the way back to right, you know, like I said, right when
I was left the house and was becoming a gospel musician, I started to ask these questions and
doing Daniel fast. But again, I was trying, I was oscillating in and out and trying to find the right
way to eat an animal, but then, or kill an animal.
But then over time, I started reading my Bible more,
doing more and more research
to really understand what the truth was.
And that led me to the point of meeting Kip,
the co-director of these previous films,
raising some hard questions to him,
and him saying, hey dude, let's make a film about this.
Crazy.
The one that stood out to me from the film
was when you went to the kosher farm,
because I always assumed that was just way higher quality
meat.
Right.
And apparently it wasn't the one you went to.
Yeah.
I mean, in some ways, kosher and halal can actually be worse.
Really?
Well, first of all, the slaughter methods,
they're meant to be more humane, but actually they
slice the animal's neck and they bleed out
while they're alive.
Damn. The level of suffering.
And yeah, and the kosher farms themselves,
like you saw in the film
and anyone who watches Christ Spiritsy will see,
we went to one of the best kosher farms in Israel
and the conditions are horrible,
but they'll get certified as kosher.
And there's things going on there
that someone who really is trying certified as kosher. And there's things going on there that someone
who really is trying to follow kosher would just gasp at
because it's not actually kosher.
Many people say that kosher just doesn't even really exist.
The actual standard that is believed to be followed
isn't being followed in general.
So there's funny enough, a large movement of 70 or more rabbis
who have come together and basically said,
plant-based is the new kosher because there's just no way
around with serving the amount of meat
in growing the number of animals in that type of way
just isn't even possible.
So it's a shame because you hear all these healthy terms
like grass-fed, like pasture-raised,
and then you actually
have someone go there and it's not much better
and you're paying a premium.
These animals are being treated pretty horribly.
Right, yeah, and grass fed, humanely raised.
What's another one?
These are all like feel good terms, I feel.
They're marketing.
No antibiotics.
Yeah, no antibiotics, non-GMO, free range.
No antibiotics. Yeah, no antibiotics, non-GMO, free range.
I just feel their marketing terms.
They're feel good labels that make people feel better
about what they're getting.
But the reality is, even if there's subtle differences,
what I learned, again, coming from someone
who loved barbecue and hunting and doing the whole thing,
when I actually saw the slaughterhouses,
it doesn't matter if it's a free range, grass-fed,
non-GMO, wild-caught, whatever,
it all ends up in the same slaughterhouse.
So they all meet their same end with death.
And a lot of times suffering evolved with that death.
But even still, like grass-fed,
you can get a grass fed label
and I'm sure you've seen the viral clip of a bunch of cows,
just getting, you know, grass poured in at the last second.
So they eat a bunch of grass.
Most grass fed is actually grain fed as well too.
They have to fatten them up to a certain point.
So there'll be like grass fed for a good portion
of their life and then they'll actually feed them
a bunch of grain at the end to fatten them up. I can see that. So they'll be like grass fed for a good portion of their life. And then they'll actually feed them a bunch of grain
at the end to fatten them up.
I can see that.
So grass finish is technically the term
when they eat only grass their entire life.
But still that, you know,
there's a whole sustainability issue
with how much land it takes to feed a cow grass
its whole life.
You know, we're talking acres and acres of land,
you know, per cow.
So.
Yeah, the land and the water,
they're watering it with tap water,
which has a lot of issues these days.
Right.
So, yeah, it's scary times.
I mean, the Costco chickens,
they don't look like chickens anymore.
Right.
You see how plump they are?
Yeah, they can't. It's crazy.
It's insane.
They can't stand up, they grow super fast.
And even with the egg, in the egg industry,
they're bred to produce way more eggs
than they naturally would,
which is really hard on their system.
And so they're just in all of this suffering.
I mean, the chicken industry is scary, man.
And honestly, people don't realize,
but there's like, I think there's a stat.
I'll have to, you have to fact check it,
but I'm pretty sure that there's a stat
that the chicken as a species
is like one of the most dominant species
on planet earth because of the chicken industry.
Like pound for pound, there's more chickens
and more chicken as like a, as a being on the planet
than any other animal species
because we breed them into existence constantly.
And you know, if you, I just sometimes imagine like another being coming to earth
or something, not from here.
And like, if they were doing a book report
on planet earth or something,
they would like call it planet death
with all that's going on.
That one slaughterhouse you visited
with the former prison inmates.
Right.
That was horrific.
Yeah, that was shocking to see.
That was actually down the street from my home,
from where I grew up.
Yeah, so right around the corner from my mom's house.
And I had no idea when I went on this journey
that this was actually in my backyard.
And lo and behold, yeah, it turns out that the slaughterhouse
right around the street from my mom has inmates
that are slaughtering the animals all day.
Majority of them inmates, some of them illegal immigrants.
And so they kind of have this almost blackmail over them to work and do that.
Because if you're a prisoner, you have to, or you go back to prison.
It's like a reform program, like halfway house type setup.
And if you're an illegal immigrant, it's either that or go back to your country.
And so they're able to get them to work
in those conditions for like as little as I think 97 cents
per day, per day.
And so they're getting scraps for pay.
That industry has statistically higher rates of suicide,
domestic abuse, drug abuse, depression.
I can see it.
Think about the trauma.
You're killing living beings.
I mean.
Killing living beings all day.
And I just think what I didn't realize
was working in the barbecue restaurant
and consuming animals at the level
that I did my whole life, I was essentially paying
for someone else to do that for me.
And you may not care about animals
and their situation for whatever reason,
but most people care about other humans.
Like it's worth considering the kind of conditions
we're forcing other humans into by making these choices.
Yeah, so what's your conclusion on all this?
There's no really humane way to do this
at mass scale, consume animals.
Well, at mass scale, yes.
Well, first of all, 99% of all animals consumed,
every animal product on planet earth consumed,
99% comes from factory farms.
Wow.
So that's the other thing about grass-fed, free range,
all of these labels is we're talking about the 1%
of what we're actually consuming.
I don't think people really realize,
they assume in their head,
oh, I'm getting the good healthy kind
that's been happy because it's at Whole Foods.
Well, that's factory farming, 99%.
So yeah, there's definitely, in some ways,
the irony is that factory farming is probably
somehow a more ethical way to raise and kill animals at the scale that we have because really they're just suffering.
It's full on prison and suffering for them.
And when their life is over, they're ready for it to be over because what is their life?
It's just in a cage confined with all of this, hearing their friends get sent off to slaughter
every day.
Whereas like free range,
they live a really happy, beautiful life,
but then at the end they get betrayed
by the very one who raised them, the farmer.
It's kind of like a Hansel and Gretel kind of story
is what I realize.
Fatten them up and be really nice to them at the end,
you pop them in the oven.
So I think in some ways, ethically speaking,
yeah, we can't really do this at a mass scale for sure.
It's just, we're hitting our limits on every front.
And I'm not even talking environmental,
I'm talking water use, I'm talking the way
that slaughterhouse were in my hometown,
there's prisoners working.
It's also destroying the river
and the water quality around my hometown.
There's a whole racket with a woman
who's doing some science on the water quality there.
And it's just horrible what's going on.
So these things are stressing our communities.
They're bringing through the slaughter, depression, suicide,
all of these things.
So that's definitely not sustainable.
But if we, even the smaller free range farms,
it's like, there's only so much you could do
to support that.
There's only so many people that could actually afford that
if we went to that system
because it's really, really expensive.
It is, yeah.
And then bottom line for me,
that's why the central theme of Christspiracy
was I asked the question
and along with my co-director, Kip Anderson, is there a right way to kill an animal, a
spiritual way to kill an animal?
Or more specifically, given my personal background and concerns with my faith, how would Jesus
kill an animal?
I'm wearing this shirt right now.
I don't know if you can even see it, but-
Is that a llama?
It's a lamb.
Oh, a lamb.
But with the little-
The tag.
The tag on his ear,
because we're all used to seeing Jesus,
the good shepherd holding the lamb, right?
But imagine him holding a lamb that's meant for slaughter.
I mean, they slaughter tons of lamb, you know.
Colorado actually, close by, they just,
on the last election,
they had a, they were voting to actually eliminate slaughter
in Colorado, in Denver, I'm sorry, in Denver.
That's a big state for slaughter.
It's a big state and they have one of the biggest
lamb slaughter operations and lamb like where they grow them.
I mean, it looks like this massive area.
It's almost like trippy looking,
like the matrix or something with all these lambs growing,
but they were trying to ban it.
So I just, anyhow, the image of the film is like,
can you imagine Christ, the good shepherd,
holding a lamb and then killing it?
How would Jesus do it?
Would he slit its throat?
Would he do this? Would he do this?
Would he do that?
And so, for me, it's particularly important
to understand from an ethical perspective
along with my faith,
but I think it's a good archetypical thing for anyone.
Cause everybody in some way,
even if you're not a person of faith,
can kind of imagine Jesus as being like
one of the ultimate compassionate, peaceful human beings.
So what would be that method?
And I truly thought, you know,
going into making the film that we could find that, you know,
like going to Joel Salatin, his farm, you know,
and he's a Christian and he's trying to do everything
he can to raise animals the best way that he knows how
and, you know, trying to up in the industrial system.
But when the rubber meets the road
and it's time to actually kill the animal,
I just can't see any way that there's any kind of
compassion or peaceful way to it.
It's, and especially if you know that it's not necessary,
it flips the whole script.
And then we get into the coverups that
the deeper I went into scripture
and the deeper this rabbit hole went,
it turns out that there's an actual long standing cover up about the original Nazarene movement,
what these people were really about and how this temple animal sacrificial system was essentially
the world's first slaughterhouse system and that Jesus and the disciples were standing up against that.
Wow, so this goes way back. This isn't a modern day issue. So did you find out who exactly
was behind the cover-up?
So that's a big conversation. When it comes to the Jesus story or the Christ story, you
know, we all the way back into the ancient prophets, Jeremiah, Isaiah, many more prophets,
they were all speaking out against animal sacrifice.
You can find multiple verses where they say animal sacrifices are an abomination.
Jeremiah 722 says, God never commanded animal sacrifices when he brought you out of Egypt.
So these prophets were calling out and calling against the Hebrews who believed in,
they're one true creator God,
but they were building these systems in temples
where they were slaughtering all these animals.
And it was something they actually learned
from like Baal and Moloch worship,
which in that day and age and still to this day is seen
as more of a satanic, demonic practice.
So they're taking this practice of killing and bloodshed and applying it to their own
faith.
And these prophets like Jeremiah and Isaiah are saying, hey, God never wanted this.
He never wanted sacrifice.
He just wanted a humble heart and you to love and follow his simple commands,
like thou shall not kill.
So it goes way back.
And there's, again, even just looking at the Bible itself,
you can see moments where this truth is being covered up.
In Jeremiah 8, verse 8, he says, the lying pen of the scribes
has falsified the Torah. What's the Torah?
It's the first five books of the Bible. We're talking ancient Hebrew scripture
He one of the major prophets is is
Sharing with us in the Bible that anyone can pick up on their in their you know
If they have a Bible their house look at Jeremiah 8 verse 8
It says the lying pen of the scribes has falsified the Torah.
What were they falsifying it?
Well, Jeremiah is the prophet who's condemning
animal sacrifice more than anyone.
And his father, Hilkiah, in second Kings 22
finds an original book of Moses hidden
by the Ark of the Covenant.
This is all in the Bible.
I never was taught this stuff growing up.
But he finds another book of the law of Moses.
And when he finds it, King Josiah rips his clothes
and all the priests freak out.
And then a number of chapters later,
they end up saying they burned it.
So there in your own Bible,
you have evidence of a coverup happening
that has this air of like prophets condemning
animal sacrifice saying there's another law of Moses
that doesn't potentially include animal sacrifices
that the scribes had falsified it, right?
So even before Jesus, but I believe, you know,
I found out about all this information
just because I started looking into Jesus.
Hey, what does Jesus say about animals
and how we should treat animals, you know?
It can be harder to decipher through
because I think, you know, as we know, Jesus
mostly spoke about the orphans and the widows and these, you know, even loving prostitutes,
loving your enemies, et cetera. But when you really read between the lines, you see that
multiple times he quoted the prophet Hosea saying, I desire mercy, not sacrifice. He's another, Hosea is another one of these prophets
condemning animal sacrifice.
Well, what does that mean?
So at the time of Jesus, the temple of Jerusalem,
which is now where the Dome of the Rock stands,
which is the most heavily fought over piece of real estate
on planet earth, there at the epicenter of the world really
was a temple at Jesus's time
where they killed hundreds of thousands
to even some records say millions of animals a week
for Passover.
So we're talking about a large scale
slaughterhouse operation, blood everywhere,
there's scriptures, ancient Jewish scriptures,
and even historians that say that they would,
the priests would wait up to their ankles in blood.
There was so much blood.
So exactly.
And I didn't believe it at first.
I didn't believe it.
So I went to Israel and you see it in the film.
I said, I gotta go look around and see,
when I was growing up, the temple seemed like a church,
like where people are praying and lifting their hands
and singing and this and that. It was a slaughterhouse?
They were killing that many animals?
No way.
So we determined that one way to figure it out was like,
hey, if there's all that blood,
there's gotta be some kind of evidence of like a system
of how they got it out of there or something.
Turns out there's a tunnel that was just excavated.
I think it was just back in like 2014 to 2018,
underneath the road leading up to the temple,
where the ancient term in Hebrew is shishin,
these tubes for the blood to flow out
of the bottom of the ground would flow into this tunnel
and down to the Kidron Brook.
And I was expecting it to be some kind of small little drain, if anything,
but I was able to walk through the tunnel. It was so big. So it was able to move massive amounts
of blood and they found all kinds of bones. You know, archaeologists have found all kinds of
bones scattered that show animals coming from hundreds of miles away to supply the need. So what you have to understand is Palm Sunday,
what most Christians celebrate right before Easter,
it's this day when Jesus goes into the temple
and the famous story is that he flips the tables
of the money changers and he condemns everybody
for making God's house into a marketplace, right?
He says, my father's house should be a house of prayer,
but you've made it a den of thieves.
Well, our film goes into the translation
of that word thieves,
because that's not actually what he said.
If you realize again, quoting Jeremiah,
remember the prophet that I said earlier?
He's quoting Jeremiah right there.
And most people get thieves
because of translating from the Greek.
However, if you go back to Jeremiah
and understand what the Hebrew says,
it's much more condemning.
He is essentially calling the priest
of the temple murderers.
You've made this a den of murderers.
Well, what's being murdered in the temple?
There aren't any priests killing people.
It's all animals,
thousands and thousands of animals. And then what does he do in our Gospels that we have,
like the Gospel of John? He frees the cattle and the sheep, and he breaks the cages of the doves
and frees them. And so if he's doing those actions and freeing the animals and saying,
my house is meant to be a house of prayer, but you've made it a den of murderers,
what is he really talking about there?
So that was the light bulb that went off.
And really we cover this in our film,
but it's honestly just scratching the surface.
We're just opening a conversation
because we do go into other religions as well
and see what Hinduism has to say about how we treat animals
and what does Buddhism have to say about it?
Because Kip, my co-director, he didn't grow up Christian.
He was very much like Eastern mysticism
or just agnostic in general.
So he had those questions too.
So we just took it on and said,
what's the truth about the spiritual ethical right way
to kill?
But through this scratching the surface
and opening this like
conversation, the rabbit hole goes really deep and you start to understand that there was a Nazarene
movement which was the movement of the first century, even preceding Jesus, because all over
the Bible again, anyone can go test this, go open your Bible, especially if you have a King James,
and you'll see all over it's Jesus the Nazarene, Jesus the Nazarene. Everybody thinks it's Jesus of Nazareth,
but that's actually typically most places in the Bible that's not even a
proper translation. It's actually Jesus the Nazarene. So the Nazarene were a
group that were an offshoot of the Hebraic Judaism of the time that were an offshoot of the Hebraic Judaism of the time, that were staunchly opposing animal sacrifice.
And if we want to, I can even read later,
I have writings from early church fathers
that are talking about this Nazarene group
and how against the temple sacrifices they were,
and eating flesh.
Whoa.
There were people eating humans back then?
No, animal flesh.
Oh, animal flesh. Whoa, there were people eating humans back then? No, animal flesh. Oh, animal
flesh. Oh, they were basically Epiphanius, the early church father who was amongst a number of
church fathers that were condemning heresies, meaning they were going around and they were
finding which groups of so-called Christians or Jewish Christians weren't following the proper
orthodoxy
of the Roman Catholic tradition that they were building
and they would condemn them as heretics.
So then no one would follow them
or they would get excommunicated
or sometimes they would even like, you know, torture them.
Like there's all kinds of things that would happen, right?
But Epiphanius records in his Panarion about the Nazarenes.
And what he says is they were just like the Hebrews
in every way.
They even existed before Jesus.
But the one way they were different is they believed
that Moses had received a law, but some other.
And the difference was they didn't believe
in animal sacrifices.
They didn't believe that was instituted by the fathers,
nor did they believe in eating animal flesh.
They thought all of this was unlawful to do so.
But in every other way, they were the same.
And so they're condemned by Epiphanius,
but because of him, we have a preservation
of an understanding or an outline of who these people were.
And that goes to your original question,
which is how does this coverup happen?
The coverup happens because when the church
was being established, you know,
300 years after Jesus's death,
by that time there was a lot of time
to start to weed out these groups.
And we have evidence of ways that that was done,
you know, not even just by the church,
just by the Roman empire. The Romans sacrificed, killed, and ate tons of animals.
Like they were all about it.
They had all kinds of gods.
And I mean, you see that with the apostle Paul
when he's going to all the different cities
trying to preach, he's always rubbing up against people,
eating meat, sacrifice to idols and all of these things.
And he's kind of telling his followers,
hey, don't worry about that. You don't have to worry about meat, sacrifice to idols and all of these things. And he's kind of telling his followers,
hey, don't worry about that.
You don't have to worry about meat sacrifice to idols
because the early Christians were scared.
They didn't want to do that
because they thought that was an abomination
to eat meat sacrifice to some other God.
But he was like, oh, it's all good.
So what ends up happening is you've got this one
lone apostle Paul who says it's good,
but he's in contention with the original disciples who actually walked with Jesus and said,
no, no, no, we don't actually do that. And the church ended up amplifying Paul's teachings.
He's got more words in the New Testament than Jesus does. And over time, they weed out this
early first century movement that, like I said, was the Nazarenes. They eventually, they also went by the name the
Ebeon, or the Ebeonim, or the Ebeonites. That word Ebeon means the poor, and it was because it was
kind of a slanderous name. People used to say like, oh, those poor people, and Jesus is talking about
them in his Sermon on the Mount when he says, blessed are the poor. Paul's told to remember the poor when he's out preaching.
Most people think it's just a general term of like,
oh, remember the poor people,
but that was actually the name of their community,
the ebioneme.
It's all over the Dead Sea Scrolls.
I'm sure you're familiar with the Dead Sea Scrolls.
I've heard of the Dead Sea Scrolls, yeah.
Yeah, they were documents found in Israel in 1947,
which it really changed the game
on a lot of what we're talking about.
I mean, most scholars, you know,
I can imagine people listening to this podcast,
like this random, you know, kid from Georgia
telling the story, he makes this documentary
and he finds all this stuff.
It's not just me.
We interviewed scholars, completely unbiased scholars,
by the way, who don't have a bone to pick,
pun intended, in whether or not we should eat animals.
They just are looking at the data.
And like Robert Eisenman, Professor Robert Eisenman,
in the film, he's the guy that we interview
and he's in his boat, his office is a boat in Laguna,
I'm sorry, Long Beach, he's still there.
And, but he's not like vegetarian or vegan
or doesn't care anything about any of those ways,
but he'll tell you straight up,
oh no, the Nazarenes and James the Just, Jesus' brother,
who most people don't realize,
Jesus had a brother, James the Just,
he was the leader of this movement after Jesus' death,
heavily documented in a historical record
that James never ate animal flesh.
Wow.
So, and he's the leader of this movement.
And so you've got people like Professor Robert Eisenman
and many others that will attest,
hey, this is what the history shows us,
is that this movement was against subjugating animals
and using them in animal sacrificial temples.
But again, to me, that's just the model
of the first slaughterhouse and to many historians.
Like the way that we kill animals at the scale that we do,
that system started with the first temples
and not just Hebrew temples, by the way.
Ancient Vedic, you know, traditions in India have moments where the Brahmin class began
to sacrifice animals and then you've got certain figures that stand up and stand against it
as well.
You know, that's how you get Jainism.
Buddhism kind of started similarly too.
The Buddha is said to have stood up against the animal sacrificial ritual.
But what sets Jesus apart over all traditions,
what I think really make, you know,
there's so many conversations about Jesus, right,
for the last 2,000 years about what really makes him unique.
But I think what makes him the most unique
is that he's the only historical figure ever
to go into a temple animal sacrificial ritual
and completely shut the whole thing down.
And you have
to understand what the scale of that is. It's unanimous. It's the consensus of
scholarship is that him shutting the temple down and doing his act is what
got him crucified. You know, people will say, oh it's because he was claiming to be
the Messiah or this or that, but there were a lot of Messiahs people claiming
that at times. It was kind of hard to pin someone for that because people were
saying stuff. People were saying they that at times, it was kind of hard to pin someone for that because people were saying stuff,
people were saying they were doing miracles,
all these kinds of things.
Not saying that Jesus didn't do that,
I'm just saying that wasn't a strong enough case
to get him arrested and crucified.
But when he went and disrupted the temple,
now we're talking about disrupting Roman rule,
disrupting commerce.
They made a lot of money off the temple taxes.
You know, we were just in the other room
looking at the guy who's doing the ancient coins,
he's an ancient coin collector.
They had coins that they would have to exchange
to buy the animals and they were getting taxed like crazy
to buy these animals.
It's similar to what's happening with subsidies today.
All this stuff is relevant today as it was then,
just as relevant because now today,
animal agriculture only exists
because of the level of subsidies
that are able to support it,
because it's a completely unsustainable business.
I think it's somewhere around 62% or 67%
of all public funding goes to support animal agriculture for food.
Wow, that's a lot.
Yeah, it's a whole lot.
And it's to millions of millions to fruit and veg.
The amount of money that goes to support animal agriculture and the feed to feed it is astronomically
more amount of money
than what we get to fruit and veg.
So there's no ability to innovate with like vegetable growing
and this and that.
And it's just unsustainable.
A Big Mac that costs what?
Five, $6 should really cost us like 14, $15,
but it's being subsidized.
So anyone who's buying a Big Mac for five bucks,
we're paying for it.
I did not know that.
And there's these fast food companies
that claim they're really Christian, right?
In-N-Out, Chick-fil-A.
Exactly.
But if they really dug into this stuff,
they might second guess a little bit.
Exactly, they have the verses on their packaging.
Oh, they do?
Yeah, they do.
And so I do believe, to some extent,
like say a Chick-fil-A or In-N-Out
or even like your local pastor,
I don't think they're intentionally in on some conspiracy
because it's so far removed.
We're talking 2000 years ago,
this stuff went down where there was a schism and a split
and a way of thinking.
Jesus went and disrupted the temple and did what he did,
but then he was crucified.
And then it all becomes about
who's got the better story.
And over time, I believe that, like I said,
Paul and some of the early traditions began to downplay,
oh, this whole thing about animals and sacrifice
and everything, it's not really that important.
That's not an important part of the message.
When I think it was a key part of not only Jesus' message,
the entire Nazarene movement,
but all the prophets before him were constantly condemning.
And why?
Because if you look at the Bible in its full metanarrative,
people listening to this who are Christian will think
he's just cherry picking scripture and scenarios
to support his bias that he loves animals. But remember, that's not how I
started. I started trying to find a way to continue to kill and eat animals. But when you talk about
context, the full context of the Bible, you got to start with the beginning and you got to end with
the ending. What's the beginning? It's the Garden of Eden. Everybody knows the story of Adam and Eve in the garden, right? And God prescribes that they only eat
fruits and vegetables basically in the Garden of Eden. And then the prophetic Kingdom of Heaven,
which Jesus is always praying, comes on earth as it is in heaven. He said it's here now in our midst,
it's the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand. The kingdom of heaven is described in Isaiah 11
as no animal slaughter.
The wolf will let, even animals not slaughtering
other animals, the wolf will lay with the lamb,
the lion will eat straw like the ox,
and it ends with saying they will not hurt
or destroy on my holy mountain.
What's the holy mountain?
The temple where Jesus disrupted the animal sacrifices. And that word destroy on my holy mountain, what's the holy mountain? The temple where Jesus disrupted the animal sacrifices.
And that word destroy on my holy mountain
is actually a bit of a mistranslation.
It's the Hebrew word is shakat,
which the root is shakat, which means to slaughter an animal.
The shoket is the one who slaughters the animal
and the shakita is the process of slaughtering.
So they will not hurt or slaughter animals on my holy mountain. And that's the vision of the kingdom
of heaven. So, when Jesus shows up on the scene, it says the kingdom of heaven's here.
It makes sense why he throws down on this animal sacrificial system. He's trying to mimic
the Edenic ideal. From the beginning, we weren't killing animals. It was peace amongst,
from the beginning, we weren't killing animals.
It was peace amongst, you know, man and the creatures of God,
right?
So, and ironically, Isaiah 11, I truly believe,
is kind of the battle hymn of the Republic, if you will,
of this Nazarene, Ebeonite group that Jesus seems to be a part
of, along with his brother James, who
led the movement after him, even John the Baptist. In the opening statement of Isaiah 11, it says a shoot or a branch will come from Jesse, meaning a lineage from
this patriarch Jesse, but that word shoot is a netzer and that's where
the word Nazarene comes from.
So that's the opening statement.
A Nazarene will come, a branch, a new,
someone's going to take our religion
and they're gonna fully remove themselves from it
and start a new tree and a new belief, a Nazarene.
And then if you keep reading down,
that verse talks about freeing the oppressed
and the captives and it talks about him judging the righteous as poor.
I'm sorry, the poor as righteous, it uses that word poor there, the ebion.
So I believe the Nazarenes and the Ebionites, these first Christian sects,
got their names from this kingdom vision,
this heavenly vision of peace on earth amongst God's creatures
and trying to restore Eden
on earth, basically.
That is fascinating.
So do you believe Jesus was vegetarian his whole life
or do you think there was a pivotal moment that
switched him over?
It's a really good question.
I mean, it's hard to know.
It's 2,000 years ago.
And in general, too, I would preface
that vegan is a 20th century term,
vegetarian is, you know, probably a few hundred years before that.
So these are like modern terms we're trying to apply on him.
I just think fundamentally, Jesus was a liberator of the oppressed, all oppressed.
And that includes animals. And in fact, as you see or have heard about what we discuss with how
prisoners are being used to kill animals, subjugating animals has a direct effect on the oppression of humans.
It's at the root. Henry David Thoreau, one of my favorite authors, wrote that there are
thousands striking at the branches of evil to everyone who's striking at the root. It's
actually the quote at the beginning of our film. But what I realized is as a Christian,
I was always trying to think about
how do we help the hungry?
How do we help the poor?
How do we help child soldiers with Joseph Kony?
How do we make the world a better place
and bring that heavenly vision amongst humans?
And what I've come to realize is that
the way we subjugate animals
is at the root of all those problems.
Wow.
World hunger could be solved tomorrow with animal agriculture subsidies.
The amount of money that we spend, 300 some odd billion a year, just here in America, I believe,
could solve world hunger for an entire year tomorrow if we just redirected that.
And the proof is in the pudding in how inefficient animal-based calories are.
We use 70 to 80% of all agricultural land
to make meat for us to eat,
but we only get 12% of our calories from it.
Dang.
So, I mean, as a crypto dude,
you're probably a little bit into some stats.
Yeah, those numbers are not good.
Those aren't good stats, right?
It's a big net loss.
So we could solve world hunger.
Stuff like Joseph Kony, I got an invisible children when I was young. People trying to fight all the craziness in Africa where they're drugging these kids
and getting them to fight battles amongst tribes.
All that tribal warfare, most of it started over cattle land.
Wow.
Right.
Water, charity water.
We're all wanting to build wells and provide water
to the needy, you know, and biggest issue of water
on planet Earth, animal agriculture.
Really?
Yeah, you said earlier it goes to their...
Just here in California, I'm dealing with it right now.
I'm evacuated from my house.
LA's burning because 50 or more percent of our water
is going to animal agriculture.
40% is being diverted to save a smelt fish that's
food for the salmon that everyone is eating,
that I used to eat.
And like I said, 80% of all of our agricultural water
is going to grow alfalfa that the dairy cows eat
in California.
Yeah.
And then go drive through California
and go see cow shwitz.
I don't know if you've ever.
I haven't heard of that.
It's a nickname.
If you go drive between LA and San Francisco on the 5,
there's just miles and miles of just cows and cows and cows.
They call it cow shwitz because it's
like concentration camp.
Wow, it's a slaughterhouse.
There's slaughterhouses there,
but it's where they're growing a lot of them.
And you know, the conditions,
some of the conditions are so horrific.
They're just all sitting in their own feces
and you know, and their babies are being ripped from them
every day, you know, as they are giving birth
and constantly being impregnated.
So, you know, I like to say that in our world right now,
I truly believe in humanity and that everybody
at some level has a good heart
and wants to make the world a better place.
We have so many issues right now
that we're all thinking about and trying to solve.
COVID has brought a lot of that into our minds.
It's sent everybody or a lot of people at least
on a more open-minded path of like the powers it be
and what conspiracies or things may be happening,
big pharma, these types of things.
But again, animal agriculture is the elephant in the room
or the cow in the room or the chicken in the room
because that issue alone right there,
vaccines, vaccination,
it's on a lot of people's minds since COVID.
Yep.
The term vaccine comes from the Latin vaca,
which means cow,
because the first ever vaccines were created
through solving cowpox.
They were taking and injecting cowpox into other cows
to try to vaccinate the herd
to get quote unquote herd immunity, right?
Yeah.
But what I feel is these issues
that so many people are concerned with,
with even mandated vaccine orders, big pharma,
the overreach that it maybe has,
what everyone needs to realize is all of that started
because we're confining animals
in these conditions that are so unnatural
that it's breeding disease to where it's creating
the possibility that big pharma has an opportunity
to jump in and create a solution to the problem.
Wow.
And they've named it after cows
who we've created as a herd.
And what did you hear all throughout COVID
from conspiracy theorists like herd mentality, herd immunity?
It's almost like karmic in a way, I see it.
Jesus says the golden rule, do unto others
as you have done unto you.
Because it's a reflection that what you put out,
you get back, ask ask and you shall receive, right?
And I think about it this way,
if we don't want to be vaccinated, chipped, tracked,
confined, controlled by our government,
we're doing the same thing to the animals.
The number one species on,
sorry, let me rephrase this.
The overwhelming majority of living beings on planet Earth
are that they're chipped, they're tracked, their birth is forced and
controlled, their death is forced and controlled, they're vaccinated.
The list goes on and on.
That's animals in the agriculture industry.
The overall majority, I mean, we're talking billions and billions of beings, 90 billion
animals are killed every single year.
Holy crap. 90 billion, that killed every single year. Holy crap.
90 billion, that's just land animals.
Not even fish?
Not even fish.
If you include fish, we're talking trillions.
Jeez.
Every single year in animal agriculture
in the fishing industry.
That's like, if we just take the land animals,
90 billion animals killed per year,
that's like killing the entire human population
10 times over every single year.
So that's the majority of the experience
of living beings on earth.
So how do we as humans, the rational ones,
the humane beings, how do we expect to ever feel free
and to not be tracked and to not be forced to comply
into this and to that and all these things.
If we're turning around and doing the same thing
to lower living beings.
So ironic.
I believe in the golden rule in that way.
I think Jesus was onto something when he said that
and that it applies not only to how we treat each other,
but how we treat animals.
Jesus said, how do you treat the least of these?
You know, the last shall be first, first shall be last.
He's the servant leader, the good shepherd.
You really connected some dots for me, man.
I never connected animal ag to big pharma like this before.
This is mind blowing for me.
I need to look more into animal agriculture.
Right.
And that all ties back to that ritual system of the temples
because I truly, in a way, see the priestly system of animal sacrifices
like the original Big Pharma. And the temple was like the bank of the day. It's where all
the money came through. It was the center of the commerce. in Jerusalem, it was the way most of the money was made.
The military was there, like Jesus going and doing this,
it says in Mark that he and his disciples
actually scouted it out the night before.
So they did recon.
This was like a planned event.
And it says in Mark that they blocked people
from bringing any merchandise, it says, in the temple.
They mean animals. That's the only kind of merchandise that was really being sold.
So they blocked people from bringing animals in. Jesus comes in, disrupts the whole place,
frees the animals that are in there. We're talking like thousands of people, chaos,
cows running and sheeps running all around. And he's saying,
this was supposed to be a house of prayer,
but you've made it a den of murderers, right?
And imagine the equivalent of doing that then
is like someone in one fell swoop,
disrupting the Vatican, the Federal Reserve,
the military and big pharma all in one swoop,
because what was that animal sacrificial system?
It was what people did when they were sick or when they had ailments, leprosy, this, that,
they would go to the temple and make a sacrifice because they believe that was
their sickness had something to do with their sin and so they would go sacrifice the animal to try
to cleanse that. And so much of our systems that we are questioning today
originate from that system.
I could see why Netflix censored this now.
You got some powerful enemies.
Yeah, you're exposing some major, major players.
Yeah.
So we feel we're protected, but as you said, yeah,
just this was supposed to be a Netflix original
and it was one of the hardest decisions that we made was
we filmed for about 5 and 1 half years.
And then we started editing.
And then COVID hit, actually.
And we were locked inside, grinding away.
And then we finally produced an edit
and turned it over to Netflix.
And they were like,
we have a few notes.
And we went back and forth with them as much as we could. And we ended up splitting amicably.
Some of the previous films are still on Netflix,
but they've got, I understand they've got
probably shareholders and people they have to answer to.
And so they wanted to make some edits
that we didn't agree with.
We didn't feel it told the full story.
So we decided to back out and buy our rights back.
It was already a Netflix original.
It was a straight shot to the platform.
Like the previous film, Sea Spiritsy,
which talks specifically about overfishing
and the fishing industry.
But through the help of a lot of our supporters,
we did a crowd fund and we bought the rights back
from Netflix and went to theaters with it.
The theater is actually censored a bit of it.
I could see that.
The piece on the Red Heifer,
the theater wouldn't allow us to put,
the theater releasing company didn't want us to put the Red Heifer, the theater wouldn't allow us to put, the theater releasing company didn't want us
to put the Red Heifer information into the film.
Interesting.
But now it's live and uncensored
on our website, chrisperosy.com,
and we're gonna keep it there as long as we can.
And we've got some fun things in the future
of how we're gonna just continue the conversation.
It's only just beginning really with this film.
Because we're not on Netflix.
We get to release all of our extended interviews.
So similar to like your podcast conversations here.
It's like we have hundreds of hours of podcasts
with these really epic professors and psychologists
and philosophers and everyone
that we interviewed for the film.
And we get to release all that content over time.
I love it.
Doing it all pay it forward method right now,
just to make it accessible to everyone.
So the mission is just to get the message out there.
And like you said, try to stay safe in the process.
Yeah.
We'll link the documentary below guys.
Check it out.
I watched it.
It was great.
And I liked that you could control the speed too.
Cause I'm a 2X type of guy.
You're a 2X guy.
Wow.
I can't imagine cry spiritsy at 2X cause it already. You're a 2X guy. Yeah. Wow. I can't imagine cry conspiracy at 2X
is that already feel so fast.
It was tough,
but I had to watch the full thing to prepare for this.
So I made it happen.
I'm used to it.
You got to work your way up.
You can't just do 2X overnight.
Totally.
You got to do one two and then one five.
Totally.
Do you ever like leave it on 2X
for something that definitely shouldn't be that fast
and it starts playing it like some music.
Certain pods I can't do 2X
because the guest is already talking like fast
if it's like Gary V or someone that talks fast.
Yeah, then she talks pretty fast.
But usually I could handle it certain audio books
that are like high level, I got to tone it back.
Well, I can usually hang out to us.
Well, definitely if you ever get some time,
watch it again at regular speed.
I will.
Because it's very, if anything, it's an entertaining film.
You may not agree with it, whoever's listening,
but we've yet to see someone not be entertained by it
because it's like getting shot out of a cannon
from the beginning.
It just moves super fast.
We go all around the world.
Like I said, we're in car chases in India
being chased down by the cattle mafia.
Saw that one, you had a drone up there,
you caught 70 cows being smuggled.
Exactly.
And the police didn't do anything.
We went to the world's largest
public temple animal sacrifice in Nepal,
which was crazy, the god of my sacrifice.
Like you said, undercover at kosher farms
and humane slaughterhouses to, yeah, Joel Saladin and all these things.
We're all around the world with this film
and there's a lot in there.
And so what I've found is that people,
when they watch it second, third time,
it gets better and better each time
because they're able to absorb more of the information.
That's cool. I'll definitely give it another go.
You also got a debate coming up.
Yeah.
I don't know if we want to spoil who it's with,
but when is that?
The 20th in just a few days, three days.
Okay, so this will be out after.
So I guess you could say who it is.
Yeah, yeah.
So I'm debating Wes Huff, who was recently on Rogan,
recently debated Billy Carson.
Yep.
Which funny enough, like, yeah, I'm Billy Carson.
He's a cool dude, I'm sure super nice.
There's things that I've seen him in the past
over the years that I was questioned myself.
So in fact, I saw him on your pod.
He just came back on a few days ago.
Oh, he did.
Yeah, I remember a while back, right?
When I started following your content,
he said, Kale almost killed him.
Yeah, that was a vile one.
I went off in the comments a little bit
because I'm like, come on, bro, like killer Kale, seriously.
But yeah, so Wes has had this kind
of explosion of interest and popularity
because of that debate that he did with Billy
and crazy synchronistic story of how I went on this podcast
with this guy, Aaron Abke.
I know Aaron, yeah, he's been on the show.
Oh, he's been on the show.
So Aaron had me on a podcast that he's yet to release yet.
He's launching a new one called The Jesus Way.
Nice.
Which is covering a lot of this material
that we're talking about,
about this first century movement,
the opposition to animal sacrifices and everything.
But I went on with Aaron and then a few days later,
Aaron's like, through a few different friends
and conversation, he's like,
hey, have you seen this Wesley guy?
This is before the Billy debate.
Oh, really?
And I'm like, oh yeah, I have seen him.
Oh, he's kind of debunking Aaron in this one video.
And then Aaron's like, oh yeah,
he's actually wants to debate.
And he wants me to have someone join me
because he's bringing a person as well.
Oh, two on two.
He's like, so will you come join me? So yeah, I'm joining him for the debate to debate this
particular topic. I think Wes wants to debate some other things.
Yeah, I wonder what his take on of this is.
I don't know that he's ever really thought about it.
Unless in preparation for this debate, he's probably watched Christspiracy,
maybe watched some of the content
that maybe Aaron shared a little bit here and there
about this, but Aaron's only just started scratching
the surface on this.
He spent a long time with his previous content
talking about a variety of different things,
but he started to hone in on this more.
And like I said, he's about to launch
this Jesus Way podcast.
And I'm on the first or second episode
talking about Christspiracy and all of that.
But yeah, the timing is, couldn't be more insane
because we agreed to do it right before the Billy debate.
We didn't know it was gonna be such a big deal.
It's gonna get a lot of views now.
So then the Billy debate exploded
and obviously that went crazy.
And then he did Joe Rogan and then TBD.
TBD. Is he coming here?
Are you going to try to get him?
I think I hit him up.
I don't think he responded.
He's probably getting hit up by everyone in the mother.
I feel for him.
I feel for him.
It's got to be so stressful.
He wasn't, you know, it seems to me that I can relate.
Cause I know what it's like to just be so you're like,
I'm just obsessed with this topic.
I just want to learn everything about it.
And then you start to put it out online. Cause you're like, oh, this is with this topic. I just want to learn everything about it. And then you start to put it out online
because you're like, oh, this is cool.
You know, like I want other people to know.
And if it catches fire, it's like,
well, I really just wanted to spend time in the subject.
And now I'm being asked to debate everyone.
Everyone's condemning things that I'm doing
or praising it to a level that it's like hard to keep up with.
So I'm sure he's going through a lot.
Yeah, I hear Huberman talk about that a lot
because there's a lot of people
that are on social media all the time.
But if you're an expert,
you should focus the majority of your time
studying and researching and then post as needed.
But some people get caught up with the views
and whatever, you know.
Yeah, and that's where I'm at.
I mean, because of these fires with LA,
it actually, like our account on Christspiracy,
if I'm not making content along with my partner who's working with me,
no content's going out
and the fires just blew everything up for us.
So we've actually been like silent for a minute
but that's why I wanted to share this bit of the fires today.
I haven't heard that angle about it.
Yeah, so I don't know if you're able to push that out.
We'll expedite that one, yeah.
Cause that's, I literally haven't seen that angle at all.
Yeah. And I have some footage too, by the way.
If it's helpful.
We'll throw up the B roll, yeah.
And I have this clip from the NRDC of California,
which is an environmental group with commercial fishermen
talking about how we need to protect the smell.
Wow.
So maybe juxtapositioning that with Trump on Rogan saying,
you know, the stupid fish or whatever he said.
Which again, too, that's the irony.
A big mission besides just communicating this truth
about Christianity is also communicating the reality
of animal agriculture to conservatives
because it's been a diametrically opposed kind of position.
Like most people who are conservative,
typically are like super anti-vegan
or think it's an agenda.
A lot of hunters and yeah,
a lot of people that eat meat for sure.
And a lot of Christians eat meat.
Yeah, exactly.
But my position is I think it's fundamentally aligned,
even more so in a lot of ways than say like a left position
or an atheist position. Absolutely. I think believing in some kind of ways than say like a left position or an atheist position.
Absolutely.
I think believing in some kind of creator,
disrespecting creatures would be disrespecting the creator.
And as a conservative, like take the animal ethics out of it.
If you believe, you know, that the government
should have the least amount of overreach as possible,
then any conservative needs to look at subsidies
for animal agriculture.
It's unbelievable the amount of money that we're wasting and spending.
And they believe in strong family units.
All these animal families are being ripped apart.
The babies are taken pro-life.
Is it just for humans or is it also for animals?
And animals, many animals present sentience
at the level of say like a three to five year old.
So-
I have heard that with chickens just now and cows even.
Right, right.
I mean, pigs are super smart.
Pigs are smarter than dogs.
Wow.
So then it becomes an ethical argument of like,
well, if they have that level of sentience
and a really more so capacity to suffer,
then is it right?
Could a pro-life type argument then extend to an animal
where, you know, would we be okay with killing a baby
because it's only got a certain level of sythene
at this point, you know?
It's an interesting conversation
because certain countries, you know,
they eat dogs and cats and like over here,
we see that it's bad,
but we think eating pigs and cows is fine.
Right. Yeah. it's all cultural.
It's all cultural programming.
We actually interviewed Mark Ching, who rescued dogs
from over in China with the dog meat trade and everything.
And he makes that connection in the film.
It's one of the most powerful parts of the film,
honestly, because I think everybody
can relate to their dog or their cat or whatever at home.
And that fundamental disconnect of
the dog on my couch is to be loved and the pig on my plate is to be eaten is like,
what is the real difference?
Biologically speaking, there isn't one.
And so the fact that we make that distinguishment
is in its own way at the root of a really strong
cognitive dissonance we have in our head.
And it's, again, if you don't care about animals and ethics
and you just care about humans,
maybe you're a biohacker
and you want optimum brain performance,
brains and holistic thinking, right?
Left brain communication, all these things
are conversations that people are having.
Some of the greatest thinkers in history
ultimately were vegetarian.
Absolutely not.
Yeah, if you look up the who's who,
whether they started that way
or whether they ended up that way,
because they were thinking deeply,
Tesla, Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, all of these people,
they see that fundamental connection
between all sentient beings.
And I think that there is something in the brain,
which science does show, that comes online from being able to make that connection, between all sentient beings. And I think that there is something in the brain, which
science does show, that comes online from being
able to make that connection.
Because you're not compartmentalizing your brain
with this kind of contradiction.
Makes sense.
Cameron, this has been real fun.
I can't wait to film with you again one day.
Any closing messages, or where can people find you?
Yeah, definitely check out At Christspiracy
across all platforms.
I'm at Cameron Waters with a K and definitely go to Christspiracy.com to watch the film
ASAP if you haven't.
We don't know how long it's going to be there.
You never know these days with a film like this what could happen.
So get there and watch that.
It's totally free to watch with the opportunity to pay it forward. And yeah, we are only just beginning. There's other things in the works.
So stay tuned even beyond this film.
Love it. And stay tuned for the debate. I can't wait to watch that, man.
We'll link everything below. Thanks for coming on. Thanks, bro. Yeah.
Thanks for watching guys. See you next time.
Bet MGM is an official sports betting partner of the National Hockey League and has your
back all season long.
From puck drop to the final shot, you're always taken care of with the sportsbook Born
in Vegas.
That's a feeling you can only get with Bet MGM, and no matter your team, your favorite
skater or your style, there's something every NHL fan is going to love about Bet MGM.
Download the app today and discover why Bet MGM is your hockey home for the season.
Raise your game to the next level this year with BetMGM,
a sportsbook worth a celly, and an official sports betting partner of the National Hockey League.
BetMGM.com for terms and conditions.
Must be 19 years of age or older to wager, Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have any questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you, please contact Connects
Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor free of charge.
Bet MGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with iGaming Ontario.