You already linked me to that and as I told you, he doesn't even mention raw dairy. In any case, focusing on calcium as a problem in all milk, when the problem is really from pasteurized milk, is another intellectualism that has not proven to be true in reality.
This is just stupid, now. The fact is that Wai was referring to ALL dairy, whether raw or pasteurised. He was focusing on the harmful effects of excess calcium from milk. Excess calcium exists in both raw and pasteurised milk. *sigh* The calcium/magnesium ratio, which is related to this, is a scientific fact:-
http://deliciousliving.com/blog/time-ditch-21-calcium-magnesium-ratioThat's not true. First, milk of any mammal will nourish any mammal, and even non mammals also. Secondly, we have been drinking cows milk for thousands of years. Third, cows (and sheep and goats) have been selectively bred for higher quality milk, that is, milk that is more nourishing to us humans, for thousands of generations.
A few thousands of years is not enough(7500-11,000 years ago) for full adaptation. Note how even those few humans who have lactase adaptation start losing their adaptation as they enter adulthood:-
http://www.nature.com/news/archaeology-the-milk-revolution-1.13471As I have pointed out we have not adapted to cooked foods despite eating them for 300,000 years. So 7500 years is certainly not enough for full adaptation.
The milk of any mammal claim is just wrong. For example, one of the reasons why the notion of feral children is disputed to a large extent is because it has been shown that human infants die if they consume wolf milk. Cows' milk, while not as toxic, still has way too much casein in it and is a food full of hormones, designed to make a calf reach adult size within 2 years. Human milk, by contrast, is designed to sustain a much larger brain compared to the body, and so on and on.
Pottenger's cats thrived on raw milk. How much exposure do you think cats had to cows milk compared to humans? How much is cows milk designed / selected to nourish cats?
I do not view the Pottenger experiment as any good. Plus, it did not even bother to check if cats fed on raw (grassfed/wild)meat but no raw dairy were healthier than the other cats. Quite obviously, cats would do best on a diet consisting of foods their wild counterparts ate for millions of years.