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The 14th Dalai Lama sits on his ceremonial chair as he presides over the inauguration of the Tibetan Namgyal Monastery School in Dharamshala, India, 11/2/17 (Ashwini Bhatia/AP via NPR). |
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I always wanted to be a cowboy at home on the Tibetan range with buffalo...until I found out that they are ranchers raising animals for slaughter then killing and eating the corpses. Not thanks. |
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The Dalai Lama offers a fresh take on climate change: "Promote vegetarianism"
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Our Only Home (Dalai Lama) |
The Dalai Lama, [who is neither king nor the "Buddhist pope" but just] Tibet's spiritual leader, is 85, and he wants to warn us of something: We must take care of our planet.
"It's logical," he tells NPR's Morning Edition on a video call from his home-in-exile, Dharamshala, India.
He just co-authored Our Only Home, a book about climate change.
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In the Himalayas, where the Dalai Lama now lives, glaciers are melting. Billions of people in China and India depend on them for water.
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Killers are being killed by their killing (Dan Piraro/bizarro.com) |
It also takes a lot of land to grow food to feed livestock, making meat production a leading cause of deforestation.
"Not only is it a question of a sense of love [of these animals] but itself, you see, very bad for ecology," he says. "The beef farm, I really feel very uncomfortable. Large number of animal only for food. We should promote vegetarianism as much as we can." More
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If cowboys weren't invading Christian settler colonialists, might they have lived differently? |
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