 See this before? You don't know what it is. This is the fishing industry this side, but we kill about 2.7 trillion marine animals every year, pull them out of the ocean with a lot of bycatch, about 600,000 whales, porpoises, dolphins as bycatch, around 200,000 sharks every day. Yeah, you think fish can fill that? Yeah. So it's scientific consensus that fish feel pain, they suffer, they're sentient and intelligent. They possess a different type of intelligence to humans, but they are intelligent in their own right, you know. Some of the other industries that we're talking about are the egg and dairy industries. Egg industry kills all male baby chicks on their first day of life, even free range organic eggs. They're useless to the egg industry, so what they do is they separate them and then they either put them in this garbage bag and they suffocate them or they put them in the macerator which blends them up while they're fully conscious, they blend them up in this macerator. Some stuff on the other screens on the other side, but so we can eat animals and things that come out of them, we just think that this sort of violence is not justified, and as you can see it doesn't make you feel the best, it doesn't make us hungry, we think it's against our nature. That's why we're alive. Yeah, there's a lot of things that happen to animals while they're still alive, that we mutilate cows, we see the beaks off of chicks, so is this a movement for like just stop hurting animals for food and products we don't need? So just like a more of a vegan movement? It's a vegan movement, yeah. So all animal products are a product of some type of violence or slavery or suffering, and it's just unnecessary, like we can live happy and healthy without it. Plenty of vegan athletes are getting their protein and come over and check out the other screen. It was interesting, 51% of greenhouse gas emissions from animal agriculture, so 91% of Amazon deforestation is to cut down the trees to grow soybeans to feed to livestock, so we're destroying the planet. Ocean dead zones, which is all the sewage, all the poo from the cows and the pigs has to go somewhere, and they put them in these big pits and ends up running off into the oceans, and it creates these things called dead zones where they're just nitrogen filled and life can't be sustained in those parts of the oceans. So yeah, these sort of conditions are quite standard. I mean, this isn't anything out of the usual, these are flowering crates where the piglets, they can get crushed by their mother in there, they're diseased and they die. Any sick piglets that the farmers find, they kill them with blunt force trauma, so they grab them by their hind legs and they smack their head on the ground, and that's complete humane standard. Why do they do that? Because they're either diseased or they haven't grown up big enough. So yeah, it's a life of suffering. They're in these south stalls or flowering crates for weeks on end. Australia. Australia. Yeah, Australia is no better than any other country in the world. No better. I mean, we have this picture in our mind because of all the humane stamps on our milk and our free range eggs and the nice grass and all that. There's no legal framework that pertains to what free range actually is. They can literally call anything free range. Yeah, they get their tails cut off, their testicles are ripped out without anesthetic. Why do they kill their ears? It's a way of identifying them, ear notching. Yeah, they suffer from infections. I mean, the sow mothers, so a sow pig produces the piglets for them, right? And when she can't anymore, she's sent off to get minced up for second grade meat, like, you know, sausage rolls and stuff like that. And they suffer longer than eating. An eating pig will be killed around five or six months old. So these, we're talking about children here. The youngest animals that get killed are on their first day of life, but then you've got chickens that are killed six weeks old, and they're like children in the adult's body, you know what I mean? Yeah, it's chicken vigils are the hardest when we see them going into the slaughterhouses. They just look so innocent and vulnerable and a knee-nick and scared and they got broken legs because they can't support their own bodyway because they've been generally modified. This happens worldwide, worldwide. So about 56 billion, 60 billion land animals we kill every year, about two to 2.7 trillion marine animals. We've got plant-based alternatives these days. Like, it's just completely unnecessary. It's bad for our health, we know that. Saturated fat cholesterol cause heart disease. A vegan's blood is eight times less hospitable to cancer growth, so vegan's blood sort of destroys cancer cells. We know that meat might have been, we can eat meat if we need to. Not because we want to and because we like the taste and we're eating every day three times a day. Like, this was maybe a survival mechanism we can we can ingest if we need to, but like we can eat other humans if we needed to too, but it's just it's- What do you make of this whole paleo thing? I think that it's a bit ridiculous to be honest. Like if we're going to model our behavior from what cavemen did, like why don't we model all our behavior from what cavemen did, you know what I mean? I mean if cavemen had to eat meat to survive, that's a different story to what we're, what's happening here on Earth now. We've got alternatives. You walk into a supermarket, we've got plant-based chicken, plant-based beef, tastes the same, you know? We've got almond milk, rice milk, soy milk, you know? Yeah, that's how they kill the male baby chicks. They're products at the end of the day. We don't care about their, you know, how do they get food into this? Activists go in and get it. They leave cameras. They do it secretly. That's the only way because they won't show us. Yeah, they're innocent and vulnerable, these animals, especially on their first day of life. See, their eggs are right next to them. They've just hatched. Otherwise, they suffocate them or they put them, they gas them. So how long have you been a, a... Nearly four years. Yeah, four. Four vegan. Four vegan, nearly four years, but yeah, you see steak and baking an egg for breakfast, pork chops all the time. I didn't even know about animals and I, you know, like I just didn't even think that this was a thing, but, and then I slowly started to find out about it and I was like, wait a second, you know, if I claim to care about animals, but I've got a steak on my plate, like it's just pure hypocrisy on my part. Like I feel like, I feel like I'm, I'm choosing my taste over an animal's life of suffering and torture for an animal. Like, and even if the farmer said, I like, I treat my animals really well, like it's a humane farm. At the end of the day, they're still putting a bullet in a happy cow's head. Like that cow would want to, you know, sustain its existence, but we're looking at animals like products the same way white people looked at black people like products. The same way men belittle females, you know, like this, this, it's like this species is a mentality that some species don't matter, dogs do, pigs don't, you know. There's another way, we feel like we, it's time for us to evolve as a species. There's no need to be barbaric like this anymore. We've got alternatives. We've got amazing alternatives now. It's healthier. It's better for the environment, you know, that's taking the calves away in the dairy industry. This is for milk and cheese and chocolate. One of the most horrific experiences for a maternal animal like a cow. The only time a cow has ever, ever gets violent is when they're trying to defend their calf. And yeah, they, they bellow out for days on end after this, like the males all get killed, male calves, bobby calves will get either grown for bill and killed, or they're killed immediately. That's killing us. Yeah, bulk gunning them in the head, slitting their throat open. All animals are processed like this, where all animals will get stabbed in the throat and drained of their blood. Yeah, this is reality. The reality no one sees. And there's a reason they don't show us this, because they're, they need to make money. Selling us a product. What's that feeling inside you man? This is after they've been shot. Suffering. There's this hell hole in there. Look at that place in there. It's wood stinking there. No air, just a hell hole. Majority, the vast majority of animals are produced like this. It's just, it's, it's logistically impossible to feed seven billion people with animals without it happening like this. Yeah. You know, it's just a, a disaster. And we, we claim to be compassionate. We claim to be compassionate people. And we are, because a lot of people are just oblivious to this. I don't know what's going on. They even, they did this thing on the fish farms and salmon farms in Tasmania. Yeah. They did this, I don't know, maybe sea or something. Fish farms are hell holes too, yeah. It's just a complete chemical liquid. Yeah, just shit. Cess pool. I've heard that, like these fish farms, if you add up all their fecal matter, it's equivalent to 1.7 trillion chickens shitting in the ocean at once. That's, that's like the build up of their feces. Yeah. Because it's in a contained area, they're shitting where they are. And they can't escape prey and predators and they're just, they're getting bitten on the eyes by these parasites and they just can't escape them. They're like, I've been doing a bit of research and this is what we're faced with, you know, like, but I've been doing a bit of research into fish intelligence and they're so much more intelligent than people give them credit for, like, amazing creatures. Yeah. It's amazing how they get this kind of footage. Courageous activists. And there's, this is a small amount of it. There is thousands of hours of this stuff worldwide, you know. So, I'll give you some more information. Cool. Thanks a lot for taking it. What you doing there? Here's some epic stuff. Okay. Dairy. Greatest speech you'll ever hear, which is amazing. And this is some industry practice, environment stuff. Okay. What we're doing to the environment is scary, very scary. And health stuff. Very important because it doesn't just benefit the animals and the environment, but it benefits us as well. Absolutely. If you ever thinking about it and you want some help, sign up for 22 Day Vegan Challenge and you'll get assigned a mentor, and they'll help you through every step of the process. So it's an amazing resource. You've got someone there that can be like, oh, where can I get plant-based milk from here? And they'll be like, okay, just go to this place as to what you can have as an alternative to beef and mince and stuff like that. Awesome. That's funny because we've been thinking about for a long time becoming vegan. What's stopping them? Yeah, I think it's just laziness and actually just enjoying certain foods that you're right. When do you see this? I mean, it's a moral decision. It's a moral dilemma. We can't stop this from happening, but we can stop it from happening in our own lives. We can't stop wars from happening either, but it doesn't mean we should go out and hurt people. We can talk to the consumer and ask them to stop. And the more people that do that, they'll go out of business because that's powerless without us. Really nice talk to you, man. Anytime.