Raw Paleo Diet Forums => General Discussion => Important Info for Newbies => Topic started by: TylerDurden on October 13, 2013, 10:26:00 pm
Title: Milk is not palaeo
Post by: TylerDurden on October 13, 2013, 10:26:00 pm
Extract from Bruno Comby`s texts:-
"They are more or less about as different. The theoretical justification for accepting the meat in the diet and not the milk (apart from the pragmatic approach which shows that good quality meat is OK while eliminating milk products gives good results and that reintroducing them brings a variety of problems in) is not how different it is from human milk or human proteins. The relevant explanation seems to be that milk products were not available in nature throughout evolution until very recently. Therefore we have no reason to be adapted to a product that wasn't available for our species in nature. We could find a dead buffalo. We could kill a live buffalo and eat its meat (if courageous enough or group-hunting). But we could not drink buffalo's milk because a live adult wild female buffalo will not let a primate approach her and drink her milk. As our ancestors have logically never drinked buffalo's milk in the past, there is no reason for us to have the necessary enzymes and metabolism to digest buffalo's milk. Same for cow's milk or another species' milk. There is also no reason for instinct to work correctly and give the stop on milk at the correct point for the same reason.
I remember visiting Eric Billon in the early 90's, an instinctive MD who was then living in Quebec (he now moved back to Martinique with his family). He had gone dear-hunting in a totally virgin inhabited island in the estuary of the St Laurent River estuary with a few instinctive friends), a famous canadian hunting spot. When they came home from their hunting-trip, they brought back a female-dear that they had shot on that afternoon. Just after shooting her, they had noticed a baby-dear standing close by, very young, still breast-fed. When they told me the story, I felt sorry for the baby-dear, who will probably not have survived without his feeding-mother (he was scared and ran away when his mother was shot). But I decided to take profit of the situation for a unique scientific test. Would it be possible to drink the milk from mother-dear after its death ? That was the the milk from the breast of a freshly killed lactating mammal. It was just a few hours after mother-dear had been shot and the temperature was moderately cold on that day (5-10°C), therefore the body was in a very good state of conservation. I first noticed that the milk glands were slightly swollen, which is normal and an indication that mother-dear was indeed breast-feeding her infant. Then I put my mouth on dead-mother-dear's breast and sucked hard for the milk to see how it would taste and how my body would react. To my surprise, absolutely no milk was available however powerful the succion force. Not even one drop of milk available ! I then tried another more radical way and dissected several of those small breasts one after another with a knife (note that the use of a knife in itself is already artificial). By ripping apart the tissues and pressing them real hard, I could hardly obtain more than a few drops of whitish-redish juice from the whole animal, not more than you would obtain by pressing a solid fresh steack. Those few drops didn't even taste like milk at all (more like pressed meat or blood). The conclusion of this experiment clearly was that before our human ancestors started raising cattle at the early neolithic period (more or less 8-10 000 years ago), they probably NEVER had access to another species' milk. The live animal won't let you suck it. The dead animal doesn't have any milk available. The milk of mammals is secreted "au fur et à mesure" only when the baby mammal sucks the breast. No milk stocks-ed in advance. Cows with 50 liters of milk balancing under their belly, as we can see in every farm nowadays has be obtained only recently through artificial food given to the animals and selection of the cows giving the greatest amount of milk.
MILK OF ANOTHER SPECIES IS NOT AVAILABLE IN NATURE. THAT'S WHY YOU SHOULDN'T DRINK IT (or its derivatives)
On the contrary, it is possible to find a dead animal in nature once in a while, and our instinct will therefore have had time to adapt and develop an instinctive stop and appeal to tell us if we need or not to eat the meat.
MEAT CAN BE AVAILABLE IN NATURE. THAT'S WHY IT WON'T HARM US IF WE NEED IT. and that's why our instinct will tell us if we need to eat meat or not (mainly by the taste and smell)."