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  • 2 days ago
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00:00Hello. So, I am speaking now in light of the recent Turkey-Syria earthquake, and there are officially confirmed dead around 17,000 people, with more to be confirmed dead probably soon in the coming days.
00:24And speaking now, and generally in terms of natural disasters, what we call natural disasters, so I am thinking why do we call them disasters?
00:39Is it because it's only humans that are affected and killed, only humans that are killed, or is it because it's such a great loss of human life?
00:53Will we call them disasters if there weren't so many dead?
00:57Is it not a disaster if humans are not involved, if humans do not die?
01:03Maybe we should call it indirect terrorism because human activity on Earth and to nature has an effect on this stuff.
01:14So, we're kind of the terrorists here.
01:17So, basically this goes back to and is linked to climate change, extreme weather patterns, and it's my belief that it's what humans are doing directly or indirectly to nature that's causing this.
01:31These are symptoms of the sickness.
01:32These are symptoms of the Earth to what we're doing to it, the sickness that it has based on what humans are inflicting upon it.
01:44Because the Earth is a natural living ecosystem, and because of our effect on it, the Anthropocene, I believe is what they call it, there's real devastating consequences now.
01:59And I think it's all linked to or goes back to, it's based on the animal agriculture ordeal, the food system, and how we're raising these animals when we shouldn't.
02:17The food system is based on animals, eating them, eating their products, and it's very costly, extremely costly on the environment, on the world.
02:27It hurts the world, very much so.
02:30So, if the food system changes to a vegan one, it's much softer and kinder, nicer to the environment, to the world.
02:38It won't tick the world off so much.
02:41So, these things wouldn't happen so much, probably not at the scale that they're happening now.
02:47So, it goes back to the vegan way.
02:52If we do that, then these things won't happen, or they won't happen as much, and they won't happen to the scale that they're happening.
03:00It might not be a perfect world, but it would be a lot better than now.
03:06It wouldn't be these catastrophic events where thousands of people are dying from the floods, or the earthquakes, or the cyclones, typhoons, hurricanes, whatever it is.
03:16So, it's indirectly human-induced.
03:21It's as devastating and sad as a terrorist attack.
03:26It shouldn't be poo-pooed or brushed off as less than, like, a September 11th thing.
03:32Huge loss of life.
03:34And I believe these things can be prevented.
03:37And, like I said, again, it goes back to going to a vegan food system.
03:42Very nice on the environment.
03:45Sends a message to the environment.
03:47Calms the environment down, the world.
03:49So, you wouldn't get these disruptions, the imbalance of nature, as I once said.
03:55Everything would be balanced and smooth, and the world wouldn't be pissed off at us.
04:01And we wouldn't get these things.
04:04That's pretty much it.
04:07That's everything I wanted to say.
04:09If we move to that sort of food system, the 100% plant-based, the plant-exclusive food system, then we would get rewarded by the world, the earth, the natural global ecosystem.
04:24As opposed to being tormented and punished by it because of our animal-based food system.
04:34With all these devastating happenings.
04:38So, that's all.
04:40Have a good day, and bye.
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