The Rich Roll Podcast - How To Live More In Alignment With Your Values With Gene Baur

Episode Date: April 6, 2015

We are all born compassionate. And we carry this powerful, inherent trait through adulthood. But often this deeply ingrained impulse becomes repressed — quelled by childhood trauma; eroded by social... constraints; overwhelmed by the harried gestalt of daily life and the denial that accompanies our compulsion for convenience and immediate gratification. Today's guest is a powerful reminder of who we really are. A call to action to better align this core value of compassion with the countless choices we make daily that dictate how we live our lives. To be more mindful about not only what we what eat, but what we do; the hows and whys behind our behavior; and the implications of personal choice on both ourselves and the world at large. How to describe my friend Gene Baur? Hailed as the “conscience of the food movement” by TIME magazine, this is a guy who has spent the last 25 years traveling extensively around the country, campaigning to raise awareness about the abuses of industrialized factory farming and our current food system. Humanitarian, environmentalist, activist, undercover investigator and best-selling author, Gene is most well known as the president & co-founder of Farm Sanctuary. The first animal rescue organization dedicated to farmed animals, Farm Sanctuary shelters in New York and California provide rescue, refuge, and adoption for hundreds of farm animals each year, enabling visitors to connect with farm animals as emotional, intelligent individuals. Gene believes these animals stand as ambassadors for the billions on factory farms who have no voice, and he has dedicated his career to advocating on their behalf. He's so handsome it makes me jealous, yet I can't help but love everything about this guy. He's a beautiful soul. And he's a darn good plant-based marathon runner & ironman athlete to boot. Now for some context. This show is no stranger to people with strong points of view. But Gene was the first true animal rights activist I interviewed (in case you missed it, you can listen to our premier conversation from June 2013 here. I’m the first to admit that my original reasons for going vegan were far more selfish than ethical. Understanding that animal rights isn't exactly everyone's cup of tea, I admit to having some trepidation about publishing that interview. But that was 2013. In truth, that conversation changed me. Gene really disarmed what I would consider willful blindness when it came to so many facets regarding how our world functions. Today I have a very different lens on the issues that spark Gene's passion. Today, I can't imagine not sharing Gene's perspective. For me this marks personal growth. The evolution-revolution that is the hallmark of this journey I undertook eight years ago. Because the more educated I become about how our food system actually functions to deliver meals to our plates, the more interested and outspoken I have become about advocating for change. And the more strident and diligent I have become about aligning my daily personal decisions and consumer choices with a more compassionate and communitarian set of core values.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 You know, change is scary. And I think we're now facing more and more opportunities, though, for people to be less scared. Because, you know, we are social animals. We rub off on those around us. We do what those around us do. So the more people there are who are eating well and eating plant-based, that's going to rub off. And I think, ultimately, the big change is going to happen through ripples in the grassroots, person to person, individual to individual, sharing podcasts, sharing books, sharing information, sharing recipes, and ultimately helping each other live better.
Starting point is 00:00:37 That's my friend Gene Bauer of Farm Sanctuary. And yes, indeed, This is the Rich Roll Podcast. The Rich Roll Podcast. Hey, everybody. I'm Rich Roll, and I have a mission. It's simple, but it's powerful to help you live and be better, to become who you really are. And to do this, each week I sit down with some of the best and the brightest, the most forward-thinking, paradigm-busting minds across all categories of life, health, and excellence to serve and assist you and me, of course, in discovering, uncovering, unlocking, and unleashing our best, most authentic selves. Thank you so much for subscribing to the show on iTunes. Thank you for spreading the word to your friends and your colleagues on social media at The Water Cooler. Thank you for subscribing to my newsletter, and thank you for clicking through the Amazon banner ad at richroll.com for all your Amazon purchases. We love it. Thank you. Got Gene Bauer of Farm Sanctuary on the
Starting point is 00:01:52 podcast today. Great guy. Great talk coming up in a couple few, but first. We're brought to you today by recovery.com. I've been in recovery for a long time. It's not hyperbolic to say that I owe everything good in my life to sobriety. And it all began with treatment and experience that I had that quite literally saved my life. And in the many years since, I've in turn helped many suffering addicts and their loved ones find treatment. And with that, I know all too well just how confusing and how overwhelming and how challenging it can be to find the right place and the right level of
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Starting point is 00:03:39 wonderful, and recovery.com is your partner in starting that journey. When you or a loved one need help, go to recovery.com and take the first step towards recovery. To find the best treatment option for you or a loved one, again, go to recovery.com. All right, you guys, Gene Bauer. I love this guy. He's such a cool guy. Humanitarian activist, environmentalist, marathon runner, Ironman athlete, president and founder of Farm Sanctuary, the first animal rescue organization dedicated completely to farmed animals. in episode 35 from June of 2013. So if you're new to the show or you missed that one, I highly suggest you go back and check that out.
Starting point is 00:04:29 It's an excellent listen. And Gene's got a new book coming out this week. It comes out April 7th. You should all check it out. It's called Living the Farm Sanctuary Life. It's a great book. I got an early copy of it. And there's a lot of similarities between his book and our book.
Starting point is 00:04:42 He's got a lot of great recipes, but a lot of kind of lifestyle advice, tenets and principles around how to live more compassionately. And what's super cool is that on Wednesday night, Gene is going to be a guest on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart to talk about his new book. I'm so excited for him. I think that's just so cool. And I'm excited about what that means for the movement that he could get such mainstream, you know, broad airwaves to talk about things that he's passionate about. and he told me the whole story of how the whole John Stewart thing came to be, which I thought was really cool. And basically, John and his wife were vacationing,
Starting point is 00:05:31 and in this vacation house that they were renting, somebody had left behind a copy of Gene's first book. They read it. They loved it. And since then, John's wife became an active supporter of Farm Sanctuary. They came up and visited his farm in upstate New York, and they've become acquainted. And it's just so cool that John has invited Gene to be on his show to talk about it. So set your TiVos, everybody,
Starting point is 00:05:55 or tune in to Comedy Central on Wednesday night. Do not miss that. In this episode, we talk about a lot of things, but it's kind of oriented around Gene's five tenets or principles that he has identified for living what he calls the farm sanctuary life, which essentially boils down to how to live and eat more in alignment with our core inherent values. farming, the legislative landscape surrounding animal agriculture, the aspirational aspects of living more compassionately, how it's an ongoing evolution for everybody, and how the culture is really starting to shift and embrace an ethos that Gene, you know, this guy's been living this stuff and advocating for it for the better part of his entire adult life. So it's cool that it's now kind of reaching this populist kind of zeitgeist tipping point moment.
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Starting point is 00:08:23 Okay, let's wrap it out with Gene. Well, we're going to both be in Marshall, right? You're going to that? Marshall, Texas. That's right. So I'm hoping to get some cool interviews with some people there because anytime you go where there's a concentration of like-minded, powerful activists, personalities. The mayor of Marshall, Texas is a vegan. I know.
Starting point is 00:08:48 And he's really making this an issue in that part of the world. It's so beautiful to see. Have you been to that event before? I have. I was there a few years ago. And it's so great to see people in the community, businesses, and others that are starting to take these issues more seriously. Because the mayor is really an advocate.
Starting point is 00:09:04 And people are listening to him. and he's bringing in speakers, and he's creating a discussion and making people think about their food and all the benefits that can come from changing the way we eat. It's amazing how he became so passionate that literally he has shifted the whole town. The whole town is all about it, from what I understand. I can't wait to go and check it out. Yeah, it's so exciting. And so when you see little pockets like that, I know when I travel, I see that I'm sure for you as well, just seeing people in various communities that are making a difference and speaking out and raising awareness and encouraging others to live healthfully and well and happily and live in a way that feels good. And that's something that this, you know, eating plants instead of animals is such a sensible lifestyle.
Starting point is 00:09:49 And more and more people are now starting to embrace it and being very enthusiastic about it, too. Well, it's come a long way since 1985 and your, you know, van and selling veggie hot dogs at Grateful Dead concerts, right? Yes, yes. Well, you know, the Grateful Dead are playing, you know, this summer in Chicago, and we're hoping to have the veggie dogs there in some form, you know? So we'll see what happens. In the same recipe? Like, how did those taste?
Starting point is 00:10:18 They were canned. They were linchets. I think they're now called, I don't even know what they're called, but they were Loma Linda linchets. And they were in cans, and they're pretty salty and mainly wheat gluten. I would still eat them, but I wouldn't eat them as much as I used to. But they still exist. They're still around. I think so.
Starting point is 00:10:39 I honestly haven't seen them for a while. I haven't looked, but they were. You could show up and find some other deadheads from back in the day. Remember us? Oh, yeah. The meatless... Look how far we've come. Oh my gosh, yeah. The stadium, if Soldier Field sold veggie dogs, wouldn't that be a statement? Right, right, right. That's what we're kind of hoping happens. But the Linkettes, they were 40 to a can, so we would travel with our van, and it was very easy to do. But we're not doing that now. And hopefully the stadium will sell them.
Starting point is 00:11:10 That would be beautiful. Well, it's quite a trajectory. I mean, we talked about it at length the last time we spoke, so I don't's a long road from, from that day to kind of the awareness and what's happening right now and the whole vegan plant-based movement and what's going on with, uh, environmental awareness and conservation and, and diet and health and, and, you know, to you being on the pages of time magazine, answering 10 questions, you know, it was like, so cool to see that. Like, it's amazing. It must just feel like, wow. I was onto something back then when no one was paying attention and you just stuck with it from the
Starting point is 00:11:52 early days until now. And that's got to be quite affirming. It feels so good to see the kind of energy around this movement now. And I think, you know, in addition to animal activists, we have environmental people, we have health people, we have athletes like yourself who are setting an amazing example. We have chefs that are creating food that is so delicious that nobody can say that you give things up by becoming a vegan and eating plants instead of animals. So there's so many great things around this movement right now. I just was talking to a friend of mine the other day, longtime vegan, plant-based guy, you know, has been to every restaurant, like he's eaten at every vegan, you know, he's well-traveled and everything,
Starting point is 00:12:36 had never gone to Crossroads in LA and went there for the first time the other week. And it just blew his mind. You know, he blew his mind. blew it blew his mind that a it was filled with people that weren't vegans that just were enjoying it and he was just amazed at the creations that that tall could come up with you know and of course that's very gourmet it's very high end and all of that but just the fact that it even exists at all is like amazing it's art and and it shows clearly that you can have everything you want, all the flavors, all the textures, by eating plants instead of animals. And I think that there still is, to some extent, a general prejudice against vegan food and vegan living. And so if somebody tries something that's vegan and they don't like it, they will sometimes conclude incorrectly that, well, vegan food's terrible. I don't like it, after one thing.
Starting point is 00:13:29 But if somebody eats a bad dish hopefully it's not your veggie dog you're doing more harm than good i sometimes wonder you know because if you know i used to always think seeing something vegan on the menu was a good thing but now i'm increasingly thinking it better taste good, you know, because if people are going to try it, it better be something that they enjoy so that the existing prejudice against this kind of food doesn't kick in. Especially if you label it as such. Like, you know, if you, look, if you put a label on a bunch of kale and say, this is vegan, then people are making a judgment about this whole
Starting point is 00:14:06 lifestyle and diet based on this food, as opposed to just handing them this and saying, here, why don't you eat this without making any kind of- Judgment. Pronouncement about what it is. That's very true. And I think that's something that's happening too. Restaurants that are vegan are not broadly proclaiming to be vegan. And people are trying it because that prejudice that they have doesn't come forward. And so I think a lot of the prejudices against vegans are starting to fall away. One of them is that the food is not tasty, for example. Another is
Starting point is 00:14:40 that vegans don't get all the energy they need to do triathlons and to do other incredible athletic feats. So that's another thing that I think is starting to fall away, those prejudices. And that vegans are a certain type. Vegans span the spectrum. There are left-leaning vegans, there are right-leaning vegans. There are very health-oriented vegans, there are some that are not so. Are there any vegans in the tea party? There probably are, believe it or not. That would be interesting. I'd like to get that guy on the podcast. How does that work? I definitely know there are some conservatives who are vegans who have spoken out, in fact, against what happens to animals on factory farms and who have spoken out against the,
Starting point is 00:15:21 you know, humans' mistreatment and disrespect for other life on the planet. And so there, you know, this does really span the spectrum. Yeah. I mean, I guess it's not, I mean, we joke, but like truly, like a true conservative perspective, you know, why does that obviate a sense of compassion? You know, compassion transcends political affiliation, you know, so why not? And I think, you know, in some ways, in fact, progressive values sometimes come out of the idea of conserving nature and preserving things and holding on to things that are important. And I think that some of those notions can go in a direction that's not very healthy and becomes judgmental and disrespectful.
Starting point is 00:16:19 But ultimately, it is about respecting nature, respecting each other, respecting other life, other animals, and living in a way that is compassionate. And most people are for that, whatever their political... You could make an argument that it is an extrapolation of the pro-life perspective. Absolutely. There's been stuff written on that, in fact. Oh, has there? That's really interesting. Yeah, Matthew Scully is a former speechwriter for President George W. Bush who wrote something along those lines saying that those who are pro-life should also be pro-animal life, and that logically they're very much aligned. So there's a lot of different perspectives. And then, of course, you have to look beyond.
Starting point is 00:16:57 I mean, the lives of women also matter. So this is complicated. Right. Yeah, it's not a black and white thing. No. All right. So no Ironmans so no ironmans no no marathons that's what that was the question i uh don't have any ironman triathlons on the
Starting point is 00:17:15 horizon i've got this book coming out so i'm focusing on that i have uh signed up for the new york city marathon in november oh that's cool that is something i have that i'm looking forward to and hopefully we'll be able to get some time to train for that. Hopefully. Yes. And how about you? Do you got any coming up?
Starting point is 00:17:30 I got a book coming out, too. That's my ultra-distance event right now. I'm with you there, yeah. I'm not signed up for any races. I mean, I get out and I train every morning and every day, and I stay fit and active. But it's not like at that level where, you know, it's razor sharp or completely focused the way that it has to be, at least in my mind for me to show up at one of those races, which I should just get over myself really. I mean, it's true when you're
Starting point is 00:17:57 training for a race, like the kind of races you've done, you really do need to be very disciplined and really on it, you know? I think my personality is hardwired to kind of approach them that way, but I don't want to show up half cocked, you know, like I want to be full on. But I know there's a lot, like look at Dean Karnazes or anything. He shows up and runs marathons all the time. He runs them with people. He just goes out and has fun. And I think that maybe I'm depriving myself of that kind of an experience.
Starting point is 00:18:24 But I also feel pressure, like also being the vegan athlete or a vegan athlete. Like I feel like if I show up, I got to be on point. You know what I mean? Because people are like, oh, well, you know, if he doesn't race to his level or, you know, what we expect him to do, then that is a reflection of his lifestyle or his diet. And so that kind of plays into my thinking and screws my head up a little bit. There is pressure, especially for an elite athlete like you. Now, for me, I'm just a layperson, so if I finish an Ironman, that's good enough. Yeah, but you've got to finish.
Starting point is 00:18:56 You can't be like a DNFing, you know what I mean? You do got to finish. You're the guy from Time Magazine. But I don't need to finish it way fast. I just need to finish it reasonably well, you know, whereas you you got to kind of push it to another level and so i totally hear that i know but i want to get back i mean because it's i haven't raced since 2011 you know it's silly i can't like there's always going to be things in life that are busy that are you know life's getting busier and busier and that's a good thing and that's a gift and you know it's
Starting point is 00:19:23 a result of of you know working really hard in this movement all that kind of stuff but like i keep thinking oh well that day will come where things will calm down and i can train again he's like i don't think that day's coming well but you know but in the meantime you're right like you say you maintain a certain level of fitness and then also then there's the whole balance thing you know because you know that's the thing it is you know when i was know, it is, you know, when I was doing the Ironman training, you know, it was hard to get time for many other things, you know? So I think a balance where you're maintaining a fitness and, and, and healthy and everything, but also doing other in, you know, inspiring,
Starting point is 00:19:58 positive things is a good, feels right right now. Well, if you can figure out how to balance everything, let me know. Cause I'm definitely not good at that. It's a process, and I'm still working on it, too. It's a process. So this is exciting. The book comes out April 7th? April 7th, that's right. It's exciting. I love the book. It's beautiful. And it's interesting, because it's not just a cookbook. It's just a non-fiction kind of primer it's sort of a whole bunch of different things like you really get into this lifestyle you get into how you build farm sanctuary um you know the value system upon which farm sanctuary
Starting point is 00:20:40 was built and the principles upon which you conduct your life. And then all these great, like very easily digestible tips and tools to kind of, you know, direct your, direct your own lifestyle. And then it follows up with all these, you know, amazing vegan recipes. Beautiful. It's great, you know, so yeah, the book's really beautiful. The photography is amazing. You should be really proud. It's exciting stuff. You know, I'm very, very happy with it and very excited for it to get out on the world. And it's doing very well so far online in the pre-sales and we've got some great endorsements. And, you know, it really is about living a lifestyle that you can feel good about. And it's, you know, with Farm Sanctuary, one of our organizational values
Starting point is 00:21:19 is we speak to people where they are on their own journeys and encourage people to, you know, each day try to do a little better and try to live in a way that is aligned with your own compassionate values because most people are humane. And also we encourage people to eat food that nourishes us instead of food that makes us sick, like unfortunately most people do in the United States. And then the book has these like 100 incredible vegan recipes
Starting point is 00:21:42 from some of the top chefs and cookbook authors around the country and restaurant owners. Tal Ronan, for example, from Crossroads has some recipes in there. And it's beautiful. And this lifestyle is not about deprivation. It's about living inspired and living in a way that you feel good about and others do too. And it becomes contagious. That's the other really neat thing about it. When you go out and have this great food with other people, they enjoy it. And you don't give anything up. You actually embrace an ethic and healthy food
Starting point is 00:22:15 and just a healthy way of looking at the world with respect for other animals and nature instead of how we grow up exploiting other animals nature, and really without thinking about it. And so this is just about being respectful and living mindfully and living in alignment with our own values and interests. And you kind of lay out these values in the book. I mean, you have, what is it, five values that you kind of orient the book around, the spine of the book around. I mean, can we get into those a little bit? Sure. The five tenets are, first of all, to live in alignment with your values. Because so often people live in a dissonant way where they're, for example, eating meat from these factory farms, and they really hate what happens on factory farms, but they're still eating this meat and
Starting point is 00:22:59 supporting the system. So there's a dissonance. And so sometimes they will say, don't tell me, I don't want to know about it. It's too upsetting. So that's a dissonance. And so sometimes they will say, don't tell me. I don't want to know about it. It's too upsetting. So that's a misalignment. Right, I think it's almost like it's not even that they don't like what's going on. Like they don't think about it. There's a conscious effort to not think about it. And so they don't think about it.
Starting point is 00:23:16 So it doesn't even occur to them. Yes. You know, it doesn't come up consciously. Right. And there's an interest in not having it come up because it's painful and difficult and ugly to look at. And also, I think people are afraid that there is not a solution. They feel that they have to eat meat. And if they have to, they don't want to recognize just how harmful it is. But the fact is, we can live without eating meat. We can live without eating
Starting point is 00:23:43 animal foods. And that, to me, is a very positive news, and people can act on it. Right. Well, just kind of camping out on this issue right here for a little bit, I come across – I have friends that are health-conscious, and we have lively discussions about diet and lifestyle. I have one friend in common, very good friend. lifestyle and have one friend in common, very good friend. And he always says to me, you know, I'm not vegan, but, you know, I live super healthy. And, you know, I make sure that the meat that I eat, you know, like I don't eat meat, tons of meat, but when I do eat meat, I make sure that it's sustainably raised, it's humanely raised, it's grass fed, it's all these good things. And that gives him a certain comfort level with, it's sort of, I think it's grass-fed it's all these good things um and and that gives him a certain comfort level with
Starting point is 00:24:26 it's sort of i think it's like a it's like a a pressure valve release on that dissonance for him and i say well we can talk about that i mean i'm not so sure you know when you talk about humane you know like when you're talking about humanely raised like what does that mean like what does that actually mean like what are we talking about like he's like well i know the farmer and i'm like all right well have you gone to the farm like do you know what's actually going on i mean at the end of the day the animal's still slaughtered for your food so let's set that part aside and just look at the living conditions of the animal like what are we really talking about here and i and that's not a comfortable discussion and you know but i think asking the questions is important you know asking the
Starting point is 00:25:05 questions because sometimes people will say well they're raised humanely and they want to believe it and so will somewhat delude them the inquiry ends there though just because there's a label or somebody told them that that's the case then that's the that's because that's okay i can hang my hat on that and i really don't have to look any further that's very true and then like you say that quote you know as a pressure release valve for the dissonance when it's still an obfuscation of reality in many cases. Because so many of these humane labels sound a lot better than they are. And producers know that. And marketers and retailers know that.
Starting point is 00:25:38 And they actually sell this meat for a much higher price because the market and the demand for it is so strong compared to that for factory farming. So yeah, there is this ongoing discussion and a lot of people do say they eat certain kinds of meat, but I don't think they really think that much about it still. And so asking the questions is, you know, do you really know how they're raised is I think very valuable and very important to create awareness and an understanding of the reality of it. Because even if an animal is raised in a very nice situation, they are still sent to the slaughterhouse, and they still do have their throats cut, and they still want to live ultimately. And so we've, you know, taken their life from them. For what good? And I would suggest
Starting point is 00:26:24 that this is not only bad for the animal, but it is bad for us. Can you imagine what it would be like to have a job where what you were doing for hours every day was stringing up animals by their back leg and taking a knife and cutting their throat? I mean, that's not good for people either. Yeah. I mean, a couple observations on that. I mean, first of all, getting back to this sort of idea of labels, like whether it's humanely raised or cage-free or farm-fresh or whatever. I mean if it's certified organic, that means one thing. I'm not sure it quite means what it used to mean. have been co-opted by big food companies because for the very reasons you just mentioned, which is that they know that if they have that label on there, they can charge more or that's a coveted
Starting point is 00:27:09 thing to the consumer. But some of these other labels are not regulated at all. Like, I mean, if something says, well, certainly farm fresh means nothing, but cage free or natural. Natural is really good. Natural means nothing. fresh means nothing, but cage-free or natural. Natural is really good. Natural means nothing. And even grass-fed. I mean, is grass-fed, I would imagine, is kind of a sliding scale. Like, you know, every farm's different. Is there any kind of oversight or like minimum, you know, kind of requirement for something being called grass-fed? It is a sliding scale. And oftentimes there are accommodations for, well, it's snowing this time of year, so therefore they can't be eating grass, so we can feed them something else. So they can actually be grain
Starting point is 00:27:48 fed for part of the year? Well, I think different certifiers will allow different things, but I think with grass-fed, you know, you think of an animal out on pasture grazing, and so... Beautiful, just acres and acres of pastoral... Exactly, exactly. And most grass-fed animals are fed grain towards the end of their lives. There are some that will feed them forage or some hay or something that is not grain, but oftentimes they are fed grain. Why is that? Because they grow faster. The meat is marbled. It is something that more consumers expect as opposed to a more tough, muscly meat.
Starting point is 00:28:28 So grain is commonly used for grass-fed animals. Interesting. Yeah, I didn't know that. And I don't want to get too far afield because we're just on the first of the five lieutenants or whatever. But this is really interesting. I mean, I think that another reason why people really gravitate towards this idea of grass-fed is there's also this built-in idea that somehow, because it's grass-fed, it's more ecologically
Starting point is 00:28:56 sustainable. And when I think about that, I think, well, I guess sort of like if you just sort of don't think it through, I could see why you could go oh yeah that makes sense because it's it's a smaller farm it's not a huge industrialized factory farm but factory farms if they do one thing well it's create economies of scale like that animal is only going to live the shortest life possible they're going to feed it the least amount of resources and water, et cetera, to get it to the point where they can turn it into food. Whereas a grass-fed animal is going to live longer,
Starting point is 00:29:29 it's going to require more water, it's going to take up more land, and it's going to require more feed because it's on the planet longer before it turns into food. So to me, that makes it sound like it's less sustainable. Am I crazy? what's what's going on well you need a lot more land for grazing than you do for raising animals more intensively in the factory farming system i mean both of them are very wasteful in their own ways but one thing that also happens on these extensive grass-fed type of operations is you still over crowd the space so you have grass that sometimes is over grazed and big problems with that. And you have also manure from animals that get into waterways and into natural systems
Starting point is 00:30:12 when, again, they're packed too densely, which is common because it's profitable. And you also have federal lands that are rented by ranchers at far below the market price, which is a whole other subsidy for this industry. But the way it works now is most cattle start on the range and they're born at these cow-calf operations, which tend to be fairly small, but then they are sold and go to feedlots where they're fattened on grain.
Starting point is 00:30:39 That's the typical life of a beef animal. And so the industry will say, well, my animals are grass fed. And technically it's true at first because they start their life on a pasture with being born to a cow outside, but then they go to a feedlot. And that's what happens to animals that are exploited for beef. Other animals like chickens and pigs are much more intensively raised from the morning they come out onto this earth till the day they're killed. They're born in hatcheries if they're chickens. They're born in these confined enclosures if they're pigs. And they never go
Starting point is 00:31:20 outside, never even see nature. So the industries vary quite widely, but in every case, they are inefficient because growing plant foods to feed the animals requires a lot more energy than just growing plant foods and eating them directly. And that's sort of the big environmental reality of it. And sometimes the beef industry will say that cattle out grazing are using land
Starting point is 00:31:44 that we can't use for anything else anyway. But to that, I would suggest we don't necessarily need to use every single inch of land. You know, I think we should use arable land to grow food for people to eat instead of using arable land to grow corn and soybeans to feed livestock. Right. And that would just be much more efficient. So then we don't need to go into these marginal lands that the beef industry says we that they're using in an efficient way when in fact it isn't efficient because they're over grazing in many cases they're disrupting ecosystems and it's a system that you know needs to be just completely rethought and and it
Starting point is 00:32:19 ultimately boils down to consumers though just not buying stuff, whether it be grass-fed or factory-farmed or, quote, natural. What natural beef can come from cows who are implanted with hormones, raised in feedlots, and fed grain. So this term natural is completely bogus. Right, right, right. Well, when it becomes profitable for these companies to do something different, they will do so. these companies to do something different, they will do so. Just like the way you're seeing dairy company investment in plant-based milks, because they see the market shifting in that direction. Huge, totally. But just kind of back on this sort of sustainability rant, I mean, who's the guy who, I mean, forget about the, just sort of the efficiencies of whole, it's so
Starting point is 00:33:03 insanely inefficient. The whole thing is ridiculous. The idea of how we raise these animals for food, the amount of resources it requires and the footprint that it creates on our planet and on our economy, et cetera, all the way down the line, it doesn't make any sense at all. We're just doing it because this is the way we've always done it. But if some alien had landed here and said, this is how you're creating food for humans, that doesn't make any sense at all we're just doing it because this is the way we've always done it you know but if you if some alien had landed here and said this is how you're creating food for humans like that doesn't make any sense at all you know like doesn't but we just we don't have we don't have that perspective and i think like we were talking before the podcast about the documentary conspiracy i had those filmmakers on the on the podcast a while ago you've seen the movie but they do a really good job of kind of elucidating all of that where you can kind of see like yeah this is kind of nutty it's totally nutty just how
Starting point is 00:33:49 inefficient and backwards this animal farming business is and how you know mainstream environmental groups really aren't addressing it and our society really has not addressed it but hopefully that'll change and i think cowspiracy is going to play a big role yeah it's going to be exciting um you know still so few people have seen it, but that's going to change soon. There's some things afoot with that movie, which are pretty exciting. And hopefully a lot of Americans will be watching it soon. We'll have more information on that later. But one thing that was raised in that movie, and I'm wondering if you have any thoughts on this, is that idea of, there's this
Starting point is 00:34:25 other idea that we can use grazing to, what's the word? Sequestre carbon or something? Well, we have this problem with soil depletion, right? And that a solution to that is to graze cattle on grasslands. And somehow as a result of that, we're putting nutrients back into the soil and that this is actually a solution rather than a problem. Are you familiar with that argument? I am, yeah. I think sometimes what happens is we look at one situation that is just terrible, like cattle overgrazing and despoiling all the vegetation, ending it with lots of topsoil erosion and polluted rivers and waterways. And so that's bad. So we lighten up
Starting point is 00:35:12 the amount of grazing that happens. So now the cattle are still grazing, but they're not totally wrecking it. So compared to that totally wrecked situation, it's better. But is it optimal and is it best is, I think, the question that needs to be asked. And from my perspective, it's absolutely not the best. I think having a native ecosystem with a native species is the best. You know, all farm animals in North America have been imported with the exception of the turkey. All of them have been brought here. And so we're creating false ecosystems to maintain them and to grow them in by the billions, literally.
Starting point is 00:35:46 And in the case of cattle, rather than having them running around the prairies, it would be nice if there were bison running around the prairies with their natural predators in the natural ecosystem. And that, I think, would be the ideal. And it's a long way down the road, for sure. But sometimes with industry, they will compare one bad system with another bad system that's not quite as bad and say it is an improvement. Which it would be compared to the really bad one, but it's still not the ideal. And oftentimes I think that we sort of get into these boxes of selection A or selection B without recognizing there's c d e and all the way to z yeah i mean there's also there's this idea that that uh that if everybody suddenly went vegan
Starting point is 00:36:34 over you know overnight which of course would never happen like oh there would just be animals everywhere you know like we would it would be uncontrollable we must eat these animals this is population control and it's like no yourollable. We must eat these animals. This is population control. And it's like, no, you don't understand. We're raising these animals specifically for food. If we turn the volume down on that or shut it down, there's not going to be all these animals because the production line would stop. Absolutely. I mean, these are not animals that are just – we're like wrangling them out in the prairie to come into the feedlot. These are bred from day one to be sort of these receptacles of energy that humans can then consume.
Starting point is 00:37:12 Exactly right. And we mass produce them. We artificially inseminate them. In the case of turkeys, they've been so genetically altered that they can't even reproduce naturally anymore. So all commercially raised turkeys are now products of artificial insemination. So yeah, these are animals whose lives we completely control. We've created genetic breeds for specific purposes, like chickens to grow so fast and so large that their hearts and lungs have a hard time supporting that growth rate. They reach slaughter weight in like six weeks. So these are very young animals. And even though they are killed at
Starting point is 00:37:45 slaughter so young, every year millions still die of heart attacks because their hearts can't support that massive growth rate. But it's still profitable to the industry because they're raising them literally by the billions. That's crazy that an animal would have a heart attack at six weeks old because it's being fattened so quickly? Yes. Their hearts and lungs cannot support that incredible growth rate. And then also they have a hard time standing because they're so heavy that their legs cannot support that weight. And they have been genetically bred to have large breasts because breast meat is the most profitable. So they also are anatomically disfigured. So they kind of tilt forward. And so that's another stressor on their legs and on their bodies and on their hearts so these are the kind of animals that we have mass produced and they are
Starting point is 00:38:31 not about to overrun the world you know they're completely dependent on us and um and they're not native species they can't i mean a lot of them can't even reproduce naturally right right absolutely that's been like bred out of them well in the case of turkeys, their breasts are so large that they cannot mount to reproduce. So that's the situation there. In the case of others, they still can reproduce naturally, but it's not an easy process for some of them. And in the case of chickens, for example, that are raised for meat, the roosters are so big that they will oftentimes rip up the backs of the hens when they jump on them. And so they now have to use certain contraptions to prevent that from happening. So it's an industry that has created animals for
Starting point is 00:39:17 specific production traits without recognizing animal well-being without really any thought about other consequences than to get as much meat to the market as quickly and cheaply as possible. And the animals are just commodities in their mind, not living, feeling creatures. So there's this mentality, this lack of respect, a lack of understanding for animals. And I think it also feeds over into our lack of respect for nature, our lack of respect for consumers, where the industry will sell us things, you know, making statements that are not true, and just look at the marketplace and human beings even as commodities. Like, what's an example of that? Of how we're misled? Right.
Starting point is 00:39:59 Well, I mean, you know, the advertising campaigns, you know, beef is, you know, does a body good. No, that's milk. Beef was for dinner. Okay, I mixed my... And pork is the other white meat, right? That's right. So milk does a body good. And then also sort of this...
Starting point is 00:40:18 Get your misrepresentations straight. I know, I get them all mixed up. The dairy one, this notion that we need to drink cow's milk to get calcium so we don't get osteoporosis is not true. You know, we drink a lot of cow's milk in this country and we get a lot of osteoporosis. So these are the kinds of misunderstandings that are actively promoted to promote the consumption of these products. to promote the consumption of these products. And one of the things that the dairy industry will do, like in the school lunch program, for example,
Starting point is 00:40:50 is it will say that kids need to be drinking more cow's milk because it's better for them than soda pop. So here you have another example where you take a couple of bad things and say this one's not as bad as that one. Water would be better than both, for example. Coca-Cola, is that better than Red bull or i know right draw it could be that kind of thing right it could be like you know this you know and they could come up with a study shoot to probably to show the coke is better than something and therefore it's truly like a scene
Starting point is 00:41:15 out of idiocracy did you ever see that i i didn't i but i've heard it's uh yeah that's amazing um well i mean i lost my train of thought continue for a second yeah they're just about how how these misrepresentations and how people go along with them and we're really creatures of habit so we do things that are put in front of us and we eat mindlessly and and and and eat in a way that is not in our best interest. And we're killing ourselves by eating meat, milk, and eggs in this country and then having to take medication for heart problems and then to have surgery in some cases. And a lot of that could be prevented.
Starting point is 00:41:54 Right. I remember what I was going to say, which is that even if you remove the ethical argument out of it completely and just look at the health ramifications of how these animals are raised to end up on your plate. I mean, let's just focus on the antibiotics that end up in the meat and what that is doing in terms of antibiotic resistance and all kinds of health problems that we're seeing. Absolutely. Well, we don't actually know the full impacts. And I think there's actually an interest on the part of agribusiness and the pharmaceutical companies
Starting point is 00:42:29 to not really look. Because once you look and you investigate and you recognize that these are the specific problems associated with these practices, then you can become liable and potentially have to pay some court findings on that. So the industry, it's sort of a don't look, don't find approach in many cases. Yeah. Instead of trying to invest money into a study that will establish that something is good for you or safe or will combat some disease or cure it, the idea is we're consciously going to not do that so that we can't say that we know that it's bad, right? Exactly. There's Kathy. You should take pictures. It's true. It's true. And this is a system that's so entrenched and so dug in and the
Starting point is 00:43:21 pharmaceutical industry gets you coming and going. They get you on the farms. Most of the antibiotics produced in the US are fed to farm animals to keep them alive and growing in these horrible conditions. And then when consumers eat too much of these animal foods, we have heart disease and other problems like that. So then we need heart medication. So the pharmaceutical companies make more money there. And so there's a real interest in maintaining the status quo instead of challenging it and looking for real solutions. But those are starting to come up now and people are seeing that you can reverse heart disease, you can reverse your risk of cancer,
Starting point is 00:43:55 you can reverse diabetes, and it's all through food. The old adage, let food be thy medicine, is so poignant and so timely and it's becoming more and more resonant right now. Yeah, and it's beautiful to see people actually taking that and making it work in their own lives. Because it's hard. It's hard to step out of the system. You're talking about being mindful of your choices and the foods that you're eating. And we were talking with Dan before the podcast about changing your environment as opposed to trying to change your behavior because so many of the decisions that we make, specifically food decisions,
Starting point is 00:44:36 are unconsciously driven, right? So when you look at the extent to which those decisions are made unconsciously, and then you look at this perfectly vertically integrated system where Monsanto is patenting seeds, and those are the seeds that the farmers have to grow. And then they use Roundup on that. And then the farmers become indentured servants to these large corporations and have to keep producing these foods, even knowing that they'd rather be an organic farmer. And then we're eating these foods, and we're misrepresented about what's in them. And then we're eating these foods and we're misrepresented about what's in them. And then we get sick and then we need to go back to those companies.
Starting point is 00:45:09 And it just goes around and around and around. And so aggravating, so maddening and so unnecessary and so unhealthy. And each of us though has the power to make new types of choices. But it's tough when you're the only one, and when everybody's eating a certain way, being different is not easy. But it's becoming more common for people to
Starting point is 00:45:31 challenge and question the existing food system, and to go to farmers markets, or even to plant and grow some of their own food. And we're in the midst of a food movement now, I think, where there are more and more opportunities and more and more people recognizing the need to change. Because the way things are and have been for a number of years are just so unhealthy and disturbing and harmful to our planet. And I think it is changing. Oh, there's no question that it is. There's no question that it is. There's no question that it is. And I think what's great about it is there are so many points of entry for people to embrace it and learn about it.
Starting point is 00:46:13 Like if the environment is your thing and that's what motivates you and that's what inspires you and provokes you into a sense of activism or action, then where do you go? Well, you can go to eating vegan. You can go to being plant-based. Or if it's the ethical arguments, if it's the animal rights argument, if it's the health argument, there are so many ways to – but it's sort of like all roads lead to Rome. They all keep coming back to this because it's really the one way of eating and the one lifestyle that really kind of embraces all of these things.
Starting point is 00:46:46 Like, you know, so for me, if anything, like I get frustrated that like, when I see other people having difficulty, you know, grappling with the idea of it. Yeah, it's just so different than what most of us grew up with. And we are such creatures of habit. And logically, it makes all the sense in the world. But I think people are emotional and people are afraid of something different and afraid of change. And that's why I think if things are convenient and in front of you, and if other people are doing it, people are more likely to do that, whatever it is. So just having more fruits and vegetables more widely available and normalizing the idea of eating veggie burgers instead of hamburgers will create a lot of change
Starting point is 00:47:32 and we are starting to see it. But change is scary. And I think we're now facing more and more opportunities though for people to be less scared because we are social animals. We rub off on those around us. We do what those around us do. So the more people there are who are eating well and eating plant based, that's going to rub off. And I think ultimately the big change is going to happen through ripples in the grassroots, person to person, individual to individual, sharing podcasts, sharing books, sharing information, sharing recipes, and ultimately helping each other live better. And that feels pretty darn good, and I think most people would agree and would like to do that,
Starting point is 00:48:15 instead of living in denial and eating food that's not good for us and then having to get medication. And so this is a lifestyle that just feels so darn good. And it makes so much sense. And I think it's contagious. More and more people are picking up on it and are trying to live in a way that they feel good about. I'm just looking at the list of the other tenants of the Farm Sanct of the farm sanctuary life. We've kind of hit on that. I mean, it's engage in a mindful connection with animals, engage in a mindful connection with your food, eat plants for your health, eat plants for the health of the earth. You know, these are all things that we've been talking about.
Starting point is 00:48:57 It's a beautiful thing. to that idea of the environment changing, like the environment being your interpersonal kind of immediate environment to help inform these lifestyle shifts that almost will happen unconsciously just because people around you are doing things differently. And you see it, I mean, even with things like just the fact that Whole Foods, there's more Whole Foods restaurants and whether you're buying much of your food in there or not,
Starting point is 00:49:24 just by going into that environment and seeing it, I think has an impact on the way people think about their relationship to the foods that they're eating. Absolutely. It's an example of a different sort of more mindful way of consuming food in this country. And, you know, food is perhaps our most intimate connection with the earth. You know, what we eat literally becomes us. And if we eat junk, that has an impact physically, but also I would say emotionally and spiritually. You know, our food affects our brains. And, you know, we eat a certain way and it causes, it can impair our thinking, I believe. You know, too much sugar or whatever.
Starting point is 00:50:06 impair our thinking, I believe, you know, too much sugar or whatever. So, you know, our food choices have profound impacts personally, but also globally. And the great news about it, though, is everybody, every day can make choices that can make a big difference. And that's where I get a lot of, you know, optimism from is the fact that each of us can make a difference. You know, in many cases, you think about wars and horrible things happening around the world, and it's pretty hard to figure out what we can do about it. But when it comes to all the issues surrounding our food, our own health, other animals, the environment, the well-being of the planet, climate change, all these things, we can all do something by choosing to eat more plant foods. And that's the empowering part of it. It's just
Starting point is 00:50:45 an empowering, inspiring kind of movement. And I'm so, so happy about the way that happens. Right, right, right. And I like your choice of words there by eating more plant foods, instead of being kind of definitive that it must be this way, you must adhere to some perfectionist ideal about the way that you're eating and living your life. Otherwise, you can't be a member of my team. Totally. And we talked about this last time a little bit, but I think it's a really important issue.
Starting point is 00:51:15 And I think it's something that either turns people off or scares them, this idea of having to do it perfect. And listen, just by the virtue that we're living in the United States, we're, you know, rubber stamping stuff we don't agree to if we pay taxes. Like, you know, we're part of a system. There's only so much of that we can control. We have control over, you know, certain aspects of how we live our life on a day-to-day basis.
Starting point is 00:51:39 We can be more conscientious and conscious about those choices that we make. And that applies to, you know, the food that we're eating, the clothes that we're wearing and all those sorts of things. But we're also human beings. We're fallible. We're bred to be fallible. We make mistakes. Nobody's perfect. And, you know, I see all the time people who try to take a stab at this and then a couple weeks in they'll find themselves eating something
Starting point is 00:52:05 maybe they didn't think that they wanted to. And then they just say, well, that was too hard. I couldn't do it. I can't live up to that standard. Yeah, nobody's perfect. Not even the most vegan vegan is perfect. And I really see it as an aspiration, not a list of ingredients, not an end point. It is an ongoing process of trying to do as best you can on a regular basis. And, you know, when, if you look at it as ingredients, it's impossible. You know, for example, I try to eat organic produce, but it might be grown with animal manure. So technically is that vegan or not, you know, so, so it's not, well, we're some, we're some, you know, bugs killed in the process of tilling the soil to, you know, come on. Exactly, probably so.
Starting point is 00:52:50 See, we can't live without causing any harm, you know. So it's really an aspiration, you know. And we just try to do the best we can and be honest about the fact that it's impossible to live without causing any harm. But just try to do as well as you can and inspire others and encourage others to do as well as they can. And if somebody makes a mistake, don't spend hours and hours slamming them over it. Just acknowledge it and try to move forward in a positive way. Because I think most people do want to live in a compassionate way, in a way they feel good about and need support whenever they make
Starting point is 00:53:25 steps and try to move in that direction. Yeah, it's an evolution. I call it an evolution revolution. I like it, man. Totally. Because it was funny when I listened to our podcast we did a year and a half ago and I was like, wow, I'm in a different place than I was when I was asking you those questions. And I think that you were the first person that I had on the show that was really coming from an animal rights perspective. And I had a little bit of trepidation about introducing that to the audience. And, you know, I feel differently now. Like, you know, this is much more important to me now.
Starting point is 00:54:02 And it's not just about my health. And, you know, there's other things at play that are really worth discussing, if not more important to discuss. And it was interesting to compare, you know, where I was then to where I am now. And that continues. You know what I mean? Like I just saw some videos recently of – like I'm not on the internet like looking at interviews of animals being tortured in some slaughterhouse. Like that's – I don't do that. Like I'm – I don't actively avoid it, but I'm not like seeking it out. And I saw a video of how they treat the animals in a shearing facility in New Zealand where they're making wool. Right. And I,
Starting point is 00:54:45 and I always thought, Oh, we just, we're giving these animals a haircut. It's like no big deal. And I have a whole different perspective on that now, you know, like that's the next thing for me. Like, wow, I need to think about that a little bit more than I ever did before. And that continues, you know, there'll be something, you know, next year that I have to think about that I'm not thinking about right now. That's part of this movement. And it's so beautiful. It's an ongoing process of learning.
Starting point is 00:55:10 And same with me. I'm trying to eat healthier still. I've made some progress there, but there's more I could do. And staying in good shape, not nearly as much as you do in terms of the exercise and all that. Don't compete nearly at much as you do in terms of the exercise and all that and don't compete nearly at the level you do. But, you know, doing the Ironman was really a very satisfying process. You know, you have a goal and you go for it and you do it. So that really felt good. And so, you know, your advice on that was very helpful. So we learned from each other too.
Starting point is 00:55:42 You know, there's things that if you haven't done something, it's scary because you don't know how to. And having somebody give you advice and support who has been down that path makes it a lot easier. And I think that's a big part of what our movement is about is providing support and information and help for folks who want to make choices that are, again, more compassionate, more healthful, more life-affirming, more ecologically sustainable, and where we live on this planet in a respectful way that doesn't harm others to the extent we can. And it's impossible to cause no harm, but we do as well as we can, and we help each other in that way. Right, right, right.
Starting point is 00:56:23 But also, I think it's important to also acknowledge that vegans can be their own worst enemy. It's like a lot of people and friends of mine are like, yeah, I don't want to hear about that. They bug me. They annoy me. I'm turned off. I don't want anything to do with it.
Starting point is 00:56:38 You're cool. I like you. You're my friend. But I don't need those people. I don't want those people around me. So what is going on? Like, how can we address that? How can we change that social dynamic to kind of move forward with a better foot forward?
Starting point is 00:56:54 Yeah, well, I think, you know, vegans understandably get very angry about the horrible things that are happening. And that anger is fully justified. But how it is expressed to others sometimes pushes others away. And I think it's important to be able to communicate in a way that informs and engages instead of pushes away. And the finger wagon vegan is too commonly been the experience people have. And I think it's important, I think, for folks in the vegan movement to ask questions, you know, sometimes like, well, what do you feel like about these animals and how they're raised? Instead of telling somebody,
Starting point is 00:57:37 oh, that's terrible and you're doing bad things. I think just engaging in a discussion is a very important way to change the dynamic a little bit and to encourage people to think through these issues themselves instead of telling people what to think. And that's, I think, a problem in many different movements and in many different ways and in the political system for sure. And discourse has to be conducted in a way that is respectful, that raises everybody's thinking and creates more and more understandings and connections between people. And vegans, you know, historically who have been, you know, very much a minority and very angered and frustrated by the slow progress or the being dismissed and the animal abuse being completely ignored, you know, will sometimes react in a very passionate way. And they may be right in saying what they're saying, but they're not very effective in
Starting point is 00:58:39 connecting with people and raising a discussion. And that's, I think, part of what our movement is now working on. Well, you're a very good communicator. You know, not everybody can be effective in getting the point across as well as you can. You're very, very good at that. And you do it in a way that is very inviting. And I'm sure that that is developed, you know, since 1985 when you began this journey. But I have a theory, and I'm interested in your, whether you think this is accurate or not, because I think maybe you're part of this, which is I think people that are vegans from the get-go
Starting point is 00:59:17 or become vegans at a very early age tend to be people that I think, this is just my whack-a-doodle theory, but they just come out of the womb like more sensitive than the average person. They're sensitively attuned to their environment in a way that maybe most people aren't. And so when they see, you know, meat on a plate or an animal in, you know, a livestock situation, it triggers something in them that activates that level of sensitivity and creates a sense of right and wrong, like that doesn't seem right to me. And so what happens is frustration develops over the years that other people aren't seeing it that way.
Starting point is 01:00:01 And that frustration justifiably develops into a sense of anger. Like, how come I'm the only one who's seeing this? They're not. And then after a while, you're just going to be a pissed off human being. And then your communication is going to reflect that. And you seem like somebody who was probably one of those kids, right? Like who was pretty sensitive to these things when maybe the people around you weren't. And yet you've seemed to come out, you know, with a different perspective. Well, no, definitely was, was very sensitive growing up. And I think most people ultimately are and, and also have an empathy. And when they see somebody else hurt, whether it's a human or
Starting point is 01:00:40 another animal, there's a natural reaction that is sharing the pain, really, and not feeling good for the other and wishing the other would be okay. And there... Or like a heightened empathy. There may be that as well, yeah. And I think psychologists and sociologists would have to really dig into this, but I think the movement is very interesting. And I think everybody, whether they're animal people or not, has empathy and could have – but it's sort of like a muscle too.
Starting point is 01:01:11 The more you use it, I think the stronger it can get. And the more you do certain things, and in the case of vegans in the early days, maybe yelling was the pattern of behavior, the frustration that would come out in certain ways. I think that as our movement has matured and grown, more and more of us are talking about being effective and what is effective and being really conscious of how things are communicated. But I think what makes somebody first an animal person is a very interesting question. And I think a sensitivity is part of it and an empathy is part of it and also an interest in actually pursuing that too often i think people have an empathy or a feeling about something and they're told to do
Starting point is 01:01:57 something else and they will do the something else and so there's also an integrity to it to maintaining that sense of compassion and empathy and interest in in in following your heart right in other words what you're saying is we all kind of have it but it gets eroded and the people that stick with it are the people that had a certain sense of self maybe that was like a little bit stronger it's possible it was a sense of self or it might also have been sort of a less of a sense of the rest of the world. Right, right, right. Really a sort of, you know, a sense of self in some way, whatever that is, whether it's healthy or not is another question. Right, right. But yeah, I think so. But I think a sense of, but all of us have it. I really do believe that. And to the extent that it's awakened and enlivened, I think all of us will do better.
Starting point is 01:02:51 Interesting. Yeah, it's super interesting to just even think about that. Where does this come from? I don't know. Yeah, you were supposed to be – Like an engineer or something like that. Like managing real estate properties. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:03:04 Did your brothers and sisters end up going into the family business? No, none of them. Nobody did. What did they all do? Well, I've got one brother's a philosophy professor, a sister's an animator and teaches animation, another brother's a musicology professor, and a sister worked at Delta for a while,
Starting point is 01:03:23 another one's an actress. So they're doing all kinds of different things in different parts of the u.s right now cool you know my folks are still in the same house i grew up in in the hollywood hills yeah and uh so i i get to see them when i come to la which is nice too that's cool um so let's talk about what's going on uh legislatively and in the regulatory field in terms of factory farming, our food system, etc. There's some pretty interesting things afoot, are there not? Yes, there are. Beginning in around 2000, there was a series of pushes to pass state laws to prohibit the inhumane confinement of animals in cages where they can't turn around.
Starting point is 01:04:02 So we succeeded with several initiatives and also some state legislative efforts. Recently, Steve King, a congressman from Iowa, introduced a bill to undo all of these state protections and to put it under federal jurisdiction. He introduced a federal bill. That's right. federal jurisdiction. He introduced a federal bill. That's right. And what's ironic about it is that Kinning is a Tea Party guy who is technically against federal oversight of state issues. And he has somehow now changed his thinking on that to think the federal government should be in charge of animal welfare and state laws that protect animals from cruelty
Starting point is 01:04:42 should not stand and should be superseded by a non-existent federal standard well it's the interest of his constituency i mean i was a huge cattle producing state yeah it's big agriculture big pork big chicken big egg and um he is representing his in the interests of those in his state. And their interest, at least, when I say interest, it's a short-sighted interest in my mind. It's an interest in maintaining the status quo. It's not really an interest in creating a healthy world and a healthy food system. He wants to maintain.
Starting point is 01:05:21 He wants to get reelected. That's right. That's short-sighted, yeah. right. That's short-sighted. So it's very short-sighted, yes. He wants to get re-elected, and there's a lot of money in animal agriculture in Iowa. So if he does the bidding for animal agriculture, he will get campaign support and will be re-elected as a congressman. So what's going on with the bill? Well, it's early on, and it doesn't even have a bill number yet, but it's going to
Starting point is 01:05:46 be introduced, and we're going to be fighting it very hard. And I don't know even what it's been labeled as yet, but it's something to keep an eye out for. It's the second time he's done this. He introduced a similar bill in the last Congress, which we were able to defeat, thankfully. It's hard to know what's going to happen in the new Congress, but I am hopeful that we'll also be able to defeat it. But the fact that it's even coming up is discouraging and really speaks to how aligned agribusiness is and how entrenched agribusiness is with our legislative officials. And the system, we've got the best government money can buy,
Starting point is 01:06:24 and it's money from these industries that want to maintain a particular status quo that serves the interests of the bottom line and to support different businesses that are not putting people like Steve King in Congress. And so there's a shift that's going to have to happen. Either that or remove money from politics altogether. That's true. What's the harder road to hoe? It's a good question. It's a really good question. I don't know the answer to that.
Starting point is 01:07:03 But either one of those would be positive. But the way the system is now, it's messed up. But should that bill prevail? I mean, just to be clear, that would basically undermine every single state law that has been passed that has sort of been in the positive direction of trying to... Yeah, to prevent factory farming, for example. That's right. To prevent factory farming. There's a law here in California that makes it illegal to confine egg-laying hens, for example, in cages so tightly that they can't even stretch their wings. And then California also passed a law, which we were very happy to see, that makes it illegal to sell eggs in the state of California from factory farm battery cage operations where the hens are packed so tightly they can't stretch their wings. So that is really one of the big contentions that folks in Iowa or egg producers there have. They want to be able to have these factory farmed eggs and sell them to California. California said, no, you can't do that. And so that's an example of the kind of
Starting point is 01:08:00 law that we'd like to see and that agribusiness does not like. And that is the type of law that we like to see and that agribusiness does not like. And that is the type of thing that would be threatened by this proposal of Steve King. Interesting. And there seems to be forward movement in state laws, but also there's some regression too, like the foie gras thing in California was kind of a move in the wrong direction. It was. Absolutely. We were able to pass that law in 2004.
Starting point is 01:08:26 It went into effect in 2012 to make it illegal to produce and sell foie gras in California. Foie gras is produced by shoving a pipe down the throats of ducks or geese, force-feeding them such a huge quantity of food that their liver gets to be 10 times the normal size. It's then sold as foie gras, which means fatty liver in French.
Starting point is 01:08:46 So we passed the law, it went into effect, and the foie gras industry has been fighting it in court ever since. And they did win a court victory that said that the California law could not stand, but the Attorney General in California is going to appeal that. And we feel pretty good about the chances of the law ultimately standing. What was the legal basis? I'm not even really sure, honestly. I think it had something to do maybe with interstate commerce, but I don't know the specific legal part of it. But our legal people tell me that we should be in good shape when this is discussed at the appellate court. And hopefully, the law will be reinstated. And foie gras will, again, no longer be sellable in California. Interesting. And what's going on with ag-gag laws?
Starting point is 01:09:43 Oh, gosh. Yeah, there's still some of those happening. Yeah. It's going on with ag-gag laws? Oh, gosh. Yeah, there's still some of those happening. Yeah. It's crazy. These ag-gag laws are state laws now. I wonder if Steve King would, you know. The irony is this federal bill would not prevent those. It would only prevent the animal protection laws. It wouldn't prevent these ag-gag laws, which make it illegal and seek to prevent undercover investigations of factory farms.
Starting point is 01:10:06 And it's because the factory farming industry is so harmful that they don't want people seeing what they're doing. So these ag-gag laws have now been passed in a handful of states and they're continuously being proposed in other states. We've had a pretty good success rate at being able to kill them, but they keep popping up and from time to time they pass, and it's unfortunate. It's quite amazing. I don't understand how it passes constitutional muster.
Starting point is 01:10:33 I don't think. They haven't been challenged yet. None of these have gone to the Supreme Court, have they? That's right. They've not been challenged yet, and they haven't gone through the court process. But I agree with you that I cannot see how these would pass muster when it comes to constitutional issues. And so these things are part of our discussion now and part of our world.
Starting point is 01:10:55 And it's, you know, the law takes so long to kind of grind its way through, you know. And this, again, brings me to the marketplace and the importance of voting with our dollars, while also being involved in the political process and supporting the representatives that we believe in and stuff. But every day we vote with our dollars, and that ultimately has a significant impact that I think is going to be the biggest impact over time. biggest impact over time. I think people feel disenfranchised though. I mean, it's easy to say that. And I say it all the time too. And I believe it, but I think a lot of people hear that and they just go, yeah, but you know, who cares what I buy my, you know, spend my money on. Like, so how do we, how do we really engender, you know, people to actually believe that that does make a difference, that they can? Well, they'll feel better if they eat good food instead of feeling right, you know? But no, people do feel disenfranchised, I think.
Starting point is 01:11:57 And, you know, politically more so though, I'd say than, you know, in terms of the marketplace. And when it comes to the marketplace, we really do have choices. Sometimes they might not be as wide as we would like, but we can choose to buy an apple, for example, instead of buying a Slim Jim or one of those meat things. You can eat something healthy instead of something that is harmful. And so we do have control over that. And I think there's a lot of things we don't have control over, but we can control what we eat. And small steps lead to more steps and become empowering. You know, I know for myself, when I became vegan, and today, as I make food choices, I feel good about certain ones. And then you want to do that
Starting point is 01:12:44 again. And it's empowering. But it is sometimes tough to get over the hump. You know, if somebody's in a certain frame of mind and feels like what they do doesn't really matter, you know, it's tough. You know, but little things start mattering and adding up and becoming big things over time. So our food choices.
Starting point is 01:13:10 Again, if you get home and you have a regular habit of eating something that's unhealthy, maybe shifting that and turn it into eating something like a smoothie or an apple or something that is healthy, a little thing like that can pick up steam and turn into something significant over time. That's just crazy talk. Come on. Yeah, I know, right? Who's going to do that? Right, yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:29 I mean, yeah. So little things like this do make a difference, you know? I think that, I mean, really, the core of what you're saying and really kind of the core of the, you know, the tenets upon which, you know, your book sort of orients is really this idea of aligning your actions with your values, like making sure that your actions match up with your words and your actual belief, your belief systems. And I know what it's like to live my life where my words and my actions don't line up. And I know how that feels. And sometimes it's just kind of a low grade feeling
Starting point is 01:14:04 that you don't even know something's wrong, but it's just not right. Like you don't feel that good. And I know what it feels like to know that basically what comes out of my mouth is exactly the way that I'm behaving. And it's a different feeling. And it's kind of a profound spiritual thing. It really is. And it feels really good when you're doing that. And it doesn't matter what, you know, whatever your values are, whatever those are, when you're,
Starting point is 01:14:30 when you're, what you're saying and what you're doing are, are in on parallel tracks, there's something special about that. And, and, and I think that, that to the extent that people that are listening can try to move in that direction, trying to aspire to that has changed my life. And it doesn't mean that you're going to become an animal activist or you're going to be selling veggie dogs at a Grateful Dead concert. But there's something really amazing about that that I would implore anybody to kind of ponder for themselves. And I think to the extent that we're talking about the consumer's power to create change by voting with their dollar, I would just say, look around. Go to the grocery store. Look at all the plant-based milks. Why do you think those exist?
Starting point is 01:15:23 That's because people voted with their dollar. And they said, you know what? I want a different choice from cow's milk. I want some almond milk. I want those, you know, it's because they're profitable businesses and there's a demand for that. And we live in a capitalist consumer society.
Starting point is 01:15:37 And so when you're making that statement as a consumer, look what happens, look what follows. And now when you look around you see beyond meat you see what ethan brown is doing with that company and it's amazing and you see what josh tetrick is doing with hampton creek and the recent thing that we probably could talk about which is amazing is this lawsuit with unilever and heilman's mayonnaise i mean yeah incredible right well they're feeling threatened by this plant-based mayonnaise it's out hitting the market in thousands of different outlets and because people have voted with their dollar and said i want to try this just mayo or you know it's called just mayo and they came up with this
Starting point is 01:16:14 cockeyed ridiculous legal argument to sue them over that just blew up in their faces on a pr level it sure did and then they dropped the lawsuit and so just mayo continues to get out to the people and when people buy it they're supporting a different kind of food system, a startup plant-based company taking on Unilever. So cap is on mayonnaise, but it's the number one condiment. And the amount of money in the mayonnaise business is like insane. Like it's just billions of dollars being spent on mayonnaise. And so Josh has this idea of creating a plant-based mayonnaise, and he treats this like a tech startup. They have this office in San Francisco, like in that kind of south of market area what have you visited there i think it's really cool when you go in there scientists and they're figuring out how to take it's like one big room where you walk in and there's like
Starting point is 01:17:14 that big table where all the young people are on laptops you know like every startup and then there's these long steel tables right behind them where working right alongside each other are crazy, you know, chemists and like, you know, I don't know what these guys, geniuses looking through microscopes and coming up with, you know, crazy ways of, of, you know, using plants to make food. And right next to them are like chefs and culinary experts trying to figure out how to make it taste good and how to create the right texture for it. And they're really, like, it's kind of amazing to see. And it's literally in one big giant room.
Starting point is 01:17:51 They're all working together. But it is just one room. I mean, this whole company is really operating out of, like, this tiny little office that doesn't even have, like, a sign on the door. And Unilever, which is the parent company of Heilmann's Mayonnaise, which is the market leader, starts to get threatened by Just Mayo because Just Mayo suddenly is in Walmart and it's in Costco and this is for real. And people are starting to buy it because it's cheaper and it's arguably healthier and it doesn't use any animal products. And so it becomes a no brainer. It's more efficiently produced. It uses less resources. That's why it costs less. It's, it's just an
Starting point is 01:18:30 obvious choice. And so they see them and say, you can't do this because the legal definition of mayo means mayonnaise says that it has eggs in it. Right. Or something like that. Yeah. And they're like, yeah, but the whole point of our business is that it doesn't. That's the whole thing. Exactly. And suddenly Josh is like on every television show for the next two months. Everything from Fox News to MSNBC, all these business shows. He got more free advertising for his company out of this lawsuit. And then they dropped it.
Starting point is 01:19:05 And they just looked like they had, they looked like, you know, the bully who, you know, I don't know. Yeah, they just didn't look good. No, not at all. And it raised more awareness about just mayo. So it ultimately had a good result. But it really speaks to how frightened
Starting point is 01:19:20 these industries are of change. And, you know, it's been happening for years. Oprah was sued when she talked about beef years ago and how we might have mad cow disease in the US. frightened these industries are of change. And, you know, it's been happening for years. Oprah was sued when she talked about beef years ago and how we might have mad cow disease in the US. And these industries are very litigious. They're quick to bully and threaten those that speak out against them or challenge them or threaten them in some ways. But that I think also, and the ag-gag laws are a very good example of that too. But I think that really speaks to the fact that this system as it currently stands is untenable. It is indefensible.
Starting point is 01:19:50 And when people have information and have real choices, they're going to generally make more compassionate, more healthful choices. And so we're seeing that with Just Mayo. And that lawsuit was a really interesting episode in the sort of food battles that have been waging and will continue to wage. And I think that consumers are going to ultimately be the judge and jury on this. And by purchasing plant-based foods grown in sustainable ways that we feel good about and that don't harm the planet, we really can change things and and it is starting to happen like you mentioned the the plant-based milks now are all over the place that wasn't the case 10 years ago um so there's there's change happening and uh it's not fast enough but but there are some good signs and by the way who knows what kind of eggs end up in
Starting point is 01:20:39 the heilmans anyway i mean it's they've got to be, you know, that's no organic product, right? No. So anybody who's listening, you know, pick up the Just Mayo. Just Mayo is the way to go, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So walk me through kind of, you know, a day in the life of Farm Sanctuary. Like, you know, what does your day look like? And also, what is the process of kind of rescuing these animals
Starting point is 01:21:07 and finding a new home for them? I mean, we talked about this a little bit before, but I think I said something like, these farmers can't be too happy when you show up and say, can we take that calf off your hands? Right, right. How does that work? Well, there are more sanctuaries now,
Starting point is 01:21:23 and we currently operate three sanctuaries. And so we have rescues that come in regularly. And in some cases, it's actually people that work at these farms that will contact the authorities and report abuse. And that's kind of a new thing that's happening. And it's a very good thing to see happening. Back when we started in the 1980s, you know, we used to actually do a lot of investigations and go in and see what's happening. And investigations are still happening. But sometimes now people that work at these places are actually starting to speak out. And whenever possible, we try to use laws to protect animals.
Starting point is 01:21:59 Unfortunately, most laws regarding farm animals have been written to exclude common farming practices. laws regarding farm animals have been written to exclude common farming practices. So this is an ongoing battle that we're working on to try to have laws protect them from the worst cruelties, you know, and some of the initiatives we've worked on over the years, give them space at least to turn around, which is so modest, but it's better than not having it. But in terms of rescuing animals, so they'll come to the sanctuary and they will be checked out. In some cases, they're in really bad shape, so they might have to go to a veterinarian. And then when they're in good shape and we know they don't have anything contagious, they'll be introduced to other animals at the farm and they may stay there. Or if we can find a good home, we will place them in a good
Starting point is 01:22:41 home. We're always looking for good homes for cows and pigs and chickens and turkeys and other farm animals. And then once they're at the farm, they just live out their lives. They wake up in the morning, we open the barns for them and start feeding them and giving them water, making sure everybody's okay. And they get to go out and graze if they're cows. If they're pigs, they get to go out and wallow in the mud. They might get a couple belly rubs over the course of the day. Chickens scratch in the pigs, they get to go out and wallow in the mud. They might get a couple belly rubs over the course of the day. Chickens scratch in the dirt. They get to roost. They just get to be who they are.
Starting point is 01:23:11 And it's a beautiful, beautiful thing to see farm animals enjoying life. And at Farm Sanctuary, they're our friends, not our food. They are fellow earthlings. And we want to enjoy and experience life in a positive way with them. And we get a chance to do that. And so our first rescues, in fact, were partly ways to heal ourselves because we used to do a lot of investigations and see horrible thing after horrible thing. And you had to do something positive out of that. And we would literally find living animals thrown on piles of dead animals or living
Starting point is 01:23:46 animals thrown in trash cans. So we started rescuing them. And then as those animals healed, we also healed. And Farm Sanctuary is a place of healing and transformation for animals and also for people who care about animals and care about living in a world where violence isn't the norm and where incredible pollution of factory farming isn't the norm and where bad health isn't the norm. We want to create a different kind of world. And that's really what Farm Sanctuary has become. It's a place where vegan is normal. It's a place where we aspire to live in a compassionate way and a healthy way. And for me, a lot of my time now is out talking and discussing these issues with various people and sometimes in the media and at schools and just encouraging people to think about food. Because I think one of the big problems is we just don't think about it as a society. And so we mindlessly consume and mindlessly adopt certain habits
Starting point is 01:24:45 that don't serve us well and don't serve our planet well and it's just about waking people up to these issues and getting people to think about them so that's a big part of what i do now and um you know part of that has been doing some more of this athletic stuff you know like marathons and triathlons and things just just to show that as a vegan of many years, you have all the energy you need, you have all the nutrients you need from plant sources. And I think, you know, so we're trying to work more and more across movements, not only in the animal movement, but also in the environmental movements, in the health movements, social justice movements, even in the religious world, the yoga world, and business world. There's more and more vegan businesses now that are interested in advancing this cause.
Starting point is 01:25:32 So there's a lot of really exciting things happening, and it's a movement. Yeah, it's a great time. It's a really cool time. Never been better. And I have to say, thank you for inviting me up to the Acton Farm Sanctuary for the feeding of the turkeys. That was super fun. Oh, yeah. So cool you could come up to that.
Starting point is 01:25:51 Yeah. And like a gift and an honor to be able to get up and talk a little bit. But it was a great day. We had such a wonderful time. time. And I was just struck by the community, first of all, this community that you've built and all these people that have come together around this idea and this cause, which was great to see. And also just to interact with these animals. We're so programmed that when we think of a cow or we think of a pig, we think of what that animal looks like in the context of the typical farm situation, right? I have never seen cows as big as the cows you have.
Starting point is 01:26:32 I don't know what that one cow, what his or her name is, but that was the biggest cow I think I've ever seen in my life. Do you know which one I'm talking about? I'm not sure off the top of my head. We have some cows that weigh like close to 3,000 pounds. I mean, it's huge. Wow. I'm like, is that the way it is when, you know, like what's going on here?
Starting point is 01:26:52 When they're allowed to live. It looks like a freak of nature. It looks like out of like a movie or something, you know? When they're allowed to live, you know, they do get big. And they've been genetically bred in some cases to grow very big. So they have those genetics, but they're killed at a young age for the meat industry. So once they come to Farm Sanctuary, they just are allowed to live, and they can get to be gigantic. And they're gentle, though, too, which is the biggest cow I've ever seen.
Starting point is 01:27:17 Yeah, yeah. Do you have any events coming up, Farm Sanctuary? I mean, how is it, like, if someone's listening and they want to visit, they want to visit they can't just pop in right you have like days where you're open to the public that's right we do various visitor days so they could go to our website farmsanctuary.org and that would have information about various events that we have coming up on the farms we also do tours of the farms and um it's great for people to come and get to look at these animals and get to know them as individuals to look into the eyes of a pig, to see how big a cow is. And sometimes turkeys will even come and sit on your lap.
Starting point is 01:27:51 But the best thing to do is just to look at the website, Farm Sanctuary, and there's information on visiting there. Yeah. And you've got a bunch of appearances coming up. I was looking at the site because the book is starting to heat up. Oh, yeah. The thing at Skirball looks cool you're going to do a panel with moby and yeah like a couple other people yeah moby and gene stone and joel stein from time magazine and so yeah we're doing a panel at skirball going to be at abc carpet and home in new york city are both of those open to the public
Starting point is 01:28:20 they are absolutely so you're doing like you're kind of your formal book party in New York is going to be at ABC. Yep. And the one in LA is going to be at Skirball. That's right. Yes. Cool. Yeah. And I'm really excited about it.
Starting point is 01:28:31 And then after that, I go to Phoenix and then San Francisco and then Portland and, uh, going to be all over the place. It's really, really neat to see so much enthusiasm around the country and, um, and,
Starting point is 01:28:43 and ABC and Skirball are, it's amazing to have those kind of venues. How was it writing the book with Gene? It was good. Gene and Gene. That's right. It's very rare that you see Gene and Gene. I know. Two Genes.
Starting point is 01:28:56 But it was really great working with him. And he wrote the book Forks Over Knives that really has had a huge impact. And he worked with Rip on M G2 diet and Engine 2. So he knows his way around this world and this kind of book. Absolutely. Yeah, so we were able to include more of the health aspects of it, the science talking about the benefits of eating plants instead of animals. Also, the science of talking about the benefits of enjoying a mindful relationship with animals.
Starting point is 01:29:21 You know, there's science that shows that when you interact in a positive way with a dog, for example, your stress levels go down and it reduces the risks of various health problems. So emotional well-being goes along with interacting with animals in a positive way. Whereas if we do it in a negative way, it kind of creates an abusive relationship. So we were able to touch on some of those in the book. And that's one of the tendencies, to engage in a mindful relationship with other animals. And when it comes to farm animals, of course, most people don't really do that in this country. So that's a huge part of what we want people to start thinking about.
Starting point is 01:29:57 And I think feel better about it. You know, people know cats and dogs, and they love living with their cats and dogs, but don't recognize that cows and pigs and chickens and turkeys are individuals too. And if given the chance, they would love to hang out and sleep on your couch in some cases. So they can be cuddly as well. That's cool. But people don't think about them in that way. Our 11-year-old daughter, Mathis, she's obsessed with wolves. Like just from very early age, like that's her spirit animal.
Starting point is 01:30:29 Like she's super into it, like covered her room in pictures and all that. And for her 11th birthday, she – well, first of all, she started like a fashion line as a 10-year-old. She has a whole business and she designs clothes and she uses all – it's all vegan. Like she makes like faux leather jackets and all this. She knows how to sew and it's cool. I'll tell you about it later. But she calls her line Wolfstone and she donates 10% of her profits or her revenue, not just her profits, her revenue to a wolf sanctuary called Wolf Connection, which is in Acton. Wow.
Starting point is 01:31:06 It's like really close to- Farm Sanctuary out there. Farm Sanctuary. Wow. And for her 11th birthday, she wanted to go to Wolf Connection and check it out with her friends. And like this guy doesn't do, the guy who runs it doesn't, it's not open to the public, but we were able to contact him and like way ahead of time and work something out we
Starting point is 01:31:25 went and we spent the better part of a day with all of these amazing animals and got to interact with like you would never think like oh well you can't get close to a wolf but he's using these animals basically he uses them um he brings groups of uh sort of uh underprivileged ewes or like ewes that are like getting into trouble a lot. Like, you know, sort of and it brings them up and they do these camps and the animals are like sort of therapeutic for these kids. Yeah. And he's had like amazing results. It's a whole long story. But it was super interesting to actually we would go in the pens and like be with some of these animals.
Starting point is 01:32:02 Some of them are half bred or, you know're not all completely full-bred wolves. But it was an experience that I never would have anticipated that was really touching and amazing and all driven by my daughter. She was the one who kind of drove it. So I can attest to just the healing aspect of kind of being around these animals and the kind of impact that that can have. Absolutely. But when I was up there, I was thinking about you the whole time.
Starting point is 01:32:26 I was like, these guys are right next to each other. I should connect you with them. That would be nice, yeah. I'd love to meet them and see the place and see the wolves. Cool. And how's the publishing experience been? It's been good. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:38 I mean, Gene, you know, did a lot. It's not your first book. This is not your first rodeo, right? And publishing's changing, right? It is. Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a lot of online stuff now, just getting the word out that way. The book tour is somewhat similar to the one I did previously,
Starting point is 01:32:57 but I think we're going to actually be seeing more cities this time around. So it's been a good experience, and Rodale's been very good to work with. They've been very much behind the book. They took all the food photos, which are wonderful. So they really put a lot behind it. And I'm really grateful for that. That's great, man. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So you've got a book coming out too?
Starting point is 01:33:14 I do. Well, a couple weeks after yours. Yeah, yeah. So I'm in the same thing right now. It's good. Getting everything organized. And we've got one more pass on it and but it's all kind of you know coming together which is it's exciting it's amazing how much work it is
Starting point is 01:33:30 you know like you you think you're done with it and it's like wait we're still not done like you know and then the whole marketing like all of that like wow you know it's i don't think people realize how much work it oh yeah absolutely you know producing it and then also the marketing of it and yeah the the marketing of it. And yeah, the marketing, there's this idea that because you're with a publisher that you don't have to worry about that part of it, but really as the author, you have to shoulder that, you have to take that mantle and run with it. The majority of it. Yeah. So that becomes like a full-time job. It does. Yes. With a lot of travel sometimes sometimes which can be a little tiring yeah yeah well i
Starting point is 01:34:06 think some of the travel is probably less than it used to be because so much of it is now driven by stuff you're doing online like you know hopefully this podcast you know will move the needle for you and you know the the days of like showing up at bookstores you know you got to do some of that but you know like you know going all over the place to a million bookstores where like three people show up. I mean, you know, how many bookstore, you know, book signing things do you go to, you know? I don't know about you, but like, I don't go to too many. Yeah. Yeah. No, I'm going to hit it pretty hard early on, you know, so New York, LA, and then, but then, but no, it's true. I think a lot of it now is done online. I mean, that's where a lot of books are now purchased. And so we'll certainly be putting a lot of energy into driving people to Amazon and to, you know, other online booksellers. Interesting. and seeing people in various communities that are interested in this work and that are Farm Sanctuary supporters.
Starting point is 01:35:06 And it's really great to hear what they're doing. You know, there's people and great vegan restaurants all over the place as well. And for the book, we have contributors from all over the country who gave us amazing vegan recipes, including from you, your tempeh meatloaf. Yeah, that's right. We did contribute one. Yeah, yeah. So it's really, you know, so that's another cool thing about traveling around the country and seeing people that have been part of the book and then just seeing, being in the community
Starting point is 01:35:33 and seeing what's happening in, you know, Des Moines or wherever it might be. I don't have a trip there currently planned, but maybe at some point, you know, just seeing what's happening. It's fun. Cool. Well, the book is called Living the Farm Sanctuary Life. It comes out April 7th. I'm excited for you.
Starting point is 01:35:48 No, thank you. And we're going to be in Marshall together, but I think we're also, are you doing the New York City Veg? Yeah, that's the 15th of March. It's coming up pretty soon. Yeah, March 15th. Yep. I'll see you there.
Starting point is 01:36:00 Right on. We'll do it then. Cool, man. Well, if you're digging on gene and you want to learn more the best place is to go to farm sanctuary.com or.org.org yes and uh and you're online you're an easy guy to find but on twitter is it just gene bauer gene bauer yeah that's b-a-u-r no e-a-u-r no e that's right, exactly. Bauer like the hockey equipment company, right? I'm not sure.
Starting point is 01:36:26 Do they have an E in that or not? Is it an E? I'm not sure. Maybe I'm wrong. Just no E is the main thing. Just the four letter word, B-A-U-R. Right. Cool, man.
Starting point is 01:36:35 Thanks so much for doing the podcast. Always love seeing you, Rich. Thanks a lot. I appreciate it. Peace. Yeah, man. Plants. Good stuff, you guys.
Starting point is 01:36:50 Gene's a real deal. Don't forget to pick up his new book, check him out, and show him some love on Instagram, Twitter, and the like. So let's support this guy together. Send me your questions for future Q&A podcasts. We're going to queue one of those up pretty soon. Send those to info at richroll.com. I know before I was saying findingultra at gmail.com.
Starting point is 01:37:09 Well, we have a new email for all your Q&A questions, info at richroll.com. To find all the information, education, products, tools, resources, and inspiration you need to take your health, wellness, fitness, and self-actualization to the next level, go to richroll.com. Peruse our nutrition products, our educational products, and yes, our garments, all made with 100% organic cotton. If you like online courses, I got a couple of those at MindBodyGreen, The Ultimate Guide to Plant-Based Nutrition and The Art of Living with Purpose, both affordably priced. Go to mindbodygreen.com for more information on those. If you like the podcast, give us a review on iTunes, pick up the free app in the app store to listen to episodes
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