Dairy? Yes or No
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Cows Milk is fine if you don't mind sugar, growth hormones, antibiotics, and pus......hmmmm.......0
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Also, while abuse on farms happens, it's not nearly as common as animal rights groups would want you to believe. An abused animal doesn't produce well. They want their animals healthy and happy so they will produce better.0
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Dairy ISN'T needed in the diet............that's true. But I'll be damned if I give up yogurt, cheese and ICE CREAM. As for cancer.............you can get it from sunlight, a cell phone, breathing in smog, etc.
Ummm... no you really can't.
Unless you're talking to your MIL 2hrs/day. Badum tss... I'll be here all day.
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I love the high fat dairy products but think they may lead to head/chest congestion in my case.0
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Lmichella1952 wrote: »Think about it like this... We humans are the only species in this planet that drinks milk of other animals after childhood. We are not supposed to do this. Do some research and find out the truth.
Humans aren't supposed to do a lot of things that we do anyway. I agree with doing research, but getting proper nutritional and animal science information is not trivial unless you truly are trained in the fields or know how to properly access and navigate peer-reviewed scientific literature.
I have a PhD in physiology, have been a professor in a large university for over 20 years and conducted research & published steadily in such journals. Despite my experience, I find it difficult to work through the literature and it is very close to my own expertise.0 -
Dairy is bad for you. The hormones they give cows go right into you. Cut it out and you will feel much better0
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My son in law is from an East African tribe that centres its culture around cattle. Milk is consumed by all ages. The people are very tall.
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Cows Milk is fine if you don't mind sugar...and pus......
I don't! (By pus you just mean white blood cells.)growth hormones, antibiotics
I don't always have an issue with these things either. Antibiotics certainly have their uses and some humans benefit from growth hormone (I would agree that they typically are given it by prescription, but the fear mongering is just annoying). In any case this is a separate issue since you can choose to get dairy from cows that aren't given these.0 -
rBST is banned in the EU so that's not a problem.
To be honest though, when I lived in the US I could not stand drinking milk, I thought it was disgusting.
I have no problem with milk here in the EU (various countries).
And the yogurt and infinite variety or cheeses... oh man... I'm drooling now...
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My mutant ancestors and their ability to digest lactose says YES YES YES A RESOUNDING YES!0
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I have to have a splash of milk in my coffee. Once or twice a year I get a jones for oatmeal raisin cookies with a glass of cold milk. Ethical food production is a big thing for me so I buy my milk at a local natural foods co-op. I also love Brillat-Savarin triple-creme cheese (butterfat content 75+%, go big or go home!) but generally only have it around the holidays. Echoing ceoverturf, if you're not lactose intolerant or have any other negative side effects, enjoy in moderation like everything else.
your cheese sound intriguing
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Fearmongering, Youtube, and blogs by doctors with very clear biases ... not exactly a trifecta of success for the scientific method.0
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Lmichella1952 wrote: »Think about it like this... We humans are the only species in this planet that drinks milk of other animals after childhood. We are not supposed to do this. Do some research and find out the truth.
Nonsense. We are not much different than other animals, except for our ingenuity. Many animals will drink milk if offered it. Few humans would drink it if they had to do so directly from the teat.
What other animals drink coffee or tea or soda or wine or beer or bottled water? What animals plant and grow food rather than forage for it?0 -
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Jgnatca, yes I agree that milk is the very best food for infants (all mammals)... But mammals drink their mother's milk not cow's milk. We are the only mammal (and I am sure somebody will correct me if I am wrong) that drinks another animal's milk.
You are wrong. Ever heard of offering a cat a saucer of milk? Animals of all sorts will drink milk or eat cheese when offered. Many of my chickens love yogurt.0 -
Dairy isn't needed in a healthy diet, but in moderation it is healthy.
I personally do not eat a lot of it and I never drink milk.0 -
Jgnatca, yes I agree that milk is the very best food for infants (all mammals)... But mammals drink their mother's milk not cow's milk. We are the only mammal (and I am sure somebody will correct me if I am wrong) that drinks another animal's milk.
Tape your thumb to your hand and pick up a coffee cup of milk. Boom.
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right now I am on the whole30 program so no.0
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Even if everyone grants that mammals drinking milk of other mammals is uncommon, what is the relevance? What does it matter what other mammals do or don't do to the question of whether dairy is detrimental?
And why must you see mammals drinking milk of other mammals "everywhere"? Isn't seeing and learning that it happens at all enough for you to see that this point made by you and at least one other person in this thread isn't a strong one?0 -
Unless you're lactose intolerant - lol -that doesn't even matter, with all the lactose free dairy products on the market now. I'm lactose intolerant and enjoy all the dairy I can buy and eat/drink, within my calorie goals. It's a great source of protein and another source of calcium, to boot. If there's an ethical component to it, that's the consumer's choice, completely. Don't buy it if you disagree with it. It certainly doesn't cause cancer, and it won't make you sick - that's why it's pasteurized. It's also a great source of healthy fat, since I drink the whole-fat variety.
And dairy products are delicious, and another way to enjoy yummy foods.0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »I do eat dairy, but the milk comes from small family farms where the cows are well treated.
Is your milk and cheese the product of blatant animal cruelty?
Every time Mercy For Animals’ undercover investigators go behind the closed doors of dairy factory farms they document widespread acts of animal abuse that shock and horrify most people. Multiple investigations at dairy factory farms across the country have exposed sickening cruelty to animals, including workers viciously beating, stabbing, and dragging sick and injured cows. These investigations have uncovered:
Read more:Also, while abuse on farms happens, it's not nearly as common as animal rights groups would want you to believe. An abused animal doesn't produce well. They want their animals healthy and happy so they will produce better.
Exactly! Please do not assume that more cows equals worse care. There are a few bad apples in the bunch but by and large most dairy farmers make every effort to keep cows as happy and healthy as possible because, as the earlier poster said, they produce better. (And because they are good human beings who work with animals every day and care about cows' well being.) I highly suggest finding a dairy in your area to tour and ask questions of the farmer before labeling them as abusive factory farms based solely on numbers.0
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