Video Information:
The Interviewer Supriya Mishra is the Founder and Editor of 'The Vegan Indians'.
Website: https://www.theveganindians.com
Context:
~ What is the solution to climate change?
~ How spirituality can stop the climate change?
~ Climate change have no scientific solution
~ How veganism is related to compassion?
~ Why veganism is necessary for today's generation?
~ What is the relation between veganism and climate change?
~ How could veganism change the world?
Music Credits: Milind Date
~~~~~
#acharyaprashant #GoVegan #ClimateChange #Veganism
The Interviewer Supriya Mishra is the Founder and Editor of 'The Vegan Indians'.
Website: https://www.theveganindians.com
Context:
~ What is the solution to climate change?
~ How spirituality can stop the climate change?
~ Climate change have no scientific solution
~ How veganism is related to compassion?
~ Why veganism is necessary for today's generation?
~ What is the relation between veganism and climate change?
~ How could veganism change the world?
Music Credits: Milind Date
~~~~~
#acharyaprashant #GoVegan #ClimateChange #Veganism
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:00Talking about meat eating, there are some cultures even in India, it's a very intrinsic
00:07part of their culture and they have been eating meat since the time immemorial.
00:11So what do you think, how can that mindset be changed?
00:15How can they change their habits?
00:17Do you think meat alternatives that are coming into the market can help them shift to…
00:21I am in favour of meat alternatives.
00:24Anything that saves the poor animal's life, it's okay.
00:28It's lab-grown meat, fine, it's soya chunks, fine and I think there are some other alternatives
00:35also that taste so much like meat.
00:38Anything that saves the poor animal from that farm and that knife is welcome.
00:47See, dropping meat is not all that difficult, we make that happen every day, right?
00:58As far as our organization is concerned, we do not have an exact number, but the estimate
01:08is tens of thousands of people who would have dropped meat and a relatively smaller number
01:17who would have dropped dairy as well, let's say 50% of those who have dropped meat.
01:25So that happens and it's not as if people drop it for a while and then go back to it.
01:33We know for sure that there are people who dropped it five years back and have no inclination
01:39at all to revert to meat.
01:43So people who drop meat probably need to give them a strong enough reason, right?
01:55Had we been so mad after meat, we would have dug up corpses and enjoyed their meat as well.
02:07Had we been so mad after meat, then the Muslim would have gone after pork and the Hindu would
02:15have gone after beef, but we don't do that, right?
02:20Once we have a strong reason to not consume meat, we listen, that reason is missing.
02:33Somebody needs to have the clarity and the voice and the power to bring that reason to the population.
02:43People will listen and I believe in the intrinsic goodness of every person, we all behave in
02:55very very pitiable ways, we know that, we see that, you know, often times we behave
03:03as if we are absolute monsters, but still the potential to be very very good remains
03:11within all of us and I have faith in that.
03:16So I would not be a cynic and feel that it's Kali Yuga and it's therefore very difficult
03:26to evoke compassion inside a person or that this current generation has gone to dogs and
03:35now nobody can rectify them.
03:37I don't subscribe to all this.
03:41I think if we can talk to them properly with due reasons and get them to act from the right
03:56center within, things can change, things can change quite swiftly.
04:13Last question from my side, how do you think veganism will fare in the coming years?
04:18Where do you see it going in the next couple of years, basically how will the growth be?
04:23There are two different trajectories and the vegan movement will follow one of them
04:35or be situated at some point in the middle of them.
04:44The first trajectory is the way it is currently going, it will remain a foreign concept, a
04:58thing for the rich, a fad for the elite, that's how the general public takes it, because I
05:08am in touch with the common populations and dealing with people on an everyday basis is
05:14what I do, so I know how they look at veganism, that's one possibility.
05:21The other possibility is you ask yourself again and again, what is it that made India
05:28vegetarian and the same forces that made India vegetarian will make India vegan as well,
05:36you will have to respect those forces, you will have to channelize those forces in your
05:43Because veganism is nothing but the logical culmination of vegetarianism, where does vegetarianism
05:53come from?
05:55The feeling that I will not kill the animal, I don't want to harm the animal, that same
06:01feeling finds its final expression in veganism, when I say killing the animal is very bad,
06:16but when I am milking the animal, that too is bad, not only that when I am milking the
06:21animal, I am preparing the grounds for its slaughter, so you will have to extend vegetarianism
06:33into veganism, instead of that I often find that vegans take vegetarianism as some kind
06:40of adversary, they say no, no, no vegetarianism, in fact it's a very strange thing, I have
06:47found, I don't know whether it's a subconscious thing or what, but vegans often take vegetarians
06:57as bigger adversaries compared to even meat eaters, you say meat eaters, we can probably
07:08talk to them, but vegetarians, they are horrible, this is a problem, huge problem, I repeat
07:17veganism will have to be taken as the pinnacle of vegetarianism, vegetarianism is not an
07:25enemy, you could say vegetarianism is a work in process and veganism is the final output,
07:35when you go to the people and talk in this language and explain the concept like this,
07:39then they will understand.
07:42So Indianizing veganism should be the motto, thank you so much.