I can see, Miles, one place where something I wrote might have given a different impression than what I intended. Where I wrote "The article is wrong and slanderous" I only meant in regards to the use of the term "endemic," not re: everything in the article, and I should actually have said that Josh's misinterpretation of the article's use of that term was the wrong thing, not the article itself, as the article doesn't directly make the argument anywhere that botulism is or may be endemic to the traditional Eskimo diet(s). Instead, it states: "Botulism has
been repeatedly referred to as an endemic “hazard of the North” but typically occurs in western Eskimo coastal villages and Native Americans regions in the southwestern region of Alaska due to their proximity to aquatic foodstuffs (2)(5)(7)." Not
"botulism IS or MAY BE endemic to Eskimo diets," but rather
"has been repeatedly referred to [by someone else] as an endemic 'hazard of the North'." Thus the article takes a neutral stance on the term "endemic." I'm sorry for my sloppiness with that and hope it didn't confuse matters too badly.
If you keep diced meat in jars won't there also be pockets unexposed to air, even if you air the jar?
Doesn't Aajonus recommend shaking up or mixing around the meat a bit to give it good exposure to air? I doubt the risks are that high if the meat is kept in glass in a cool fridge and air it out now and then anyway, but Tyler and others have frequently discussed and warned about recommended precautions. Also remember, there were multiple risk factors at play in the Eskimo cases, including such as these:
whole, intact, uncut carcasses with sealed innards low in oxygen
sunlight
dirt
time
they apparently didn't bother cleaning the meat first or taking any other precautions
If anyone is worried by this and don't think taking precautions will be enough, then don't eat raw meat, or at least not "high meat" or aged meat. If you aren't worried, then you apparently agree with me that there isn't much real-world applicability to linking "endemic" botulism to traditionally-prepared and stored raw meats or raw "coastal" meats and it's therefore instead just sensationalism at best to imply a direct causal link. I don't particularly care what anyone else eats, I'm just not worried by the extreme cases that were given (I've never eaten from a whole sun-rotted animal carcass or seen anyone else do so in person in my four decades plus, though I have seen it in some videos--Bear Grylls comes to mind--and miracle of miracles, the people didn't die, though one thing they didn't do was quickly dig down to the innards, which may be one sensible precaution if for some reason someone decides to eat a rotting carcass).
And many people here would've suggested that it would be fine to eat a rotting animal carcass you found lying around 'because humans are scavengers' etc...
Did humans not scavenge for millions of years? There is of course risk with any animal carcass that has been lying in the sun and not just whales and seals, but I didn't take issue with that, I just took issue with the suggestion that botulism might be
endemic to (meaning innate, "native to", "characteristic of") traditional Eskimo foods rather than the combination of those foods with modern containers (such as ones made of plastic) and loss of traditional knowledge and practices. For example, the article states that traditionally Eskimos warned their children about the “killing rays of the sun”. Botulism isn't endemic to raw meats themselves, it's much more common to them
in the context of modern materials and practices.
Besides, when was the last time you ate a rotting animal carcass that had been lying in the sun? Even if for some reason you did, if you took some precautions like cleaning the meat, cutting it up, and laying it out in the air for several days in a cool, shaded place or in a fridge, and started with small amounts and didn't just start digging in right there on the ground the way the Eskimos who got sick apparently did, the risk would appear to be lessened. Has anyone here ever just started cutting off pieces of a sun-rottened animal carcass lying on the beach and dug deep into the organs and gorged on it right there, with hands and face covered in blood? If so, I'd like to read the story, which I would find fascinating. I would actually pay money to see this. If you do it, feel free to videotape it and I'll pay for the video, say ten bucks. I get a kick out of seeing blood-smeared Nenet kids, there's something about it that's both innocent and naughty at the same time.
Until then, it sounds like wimpy newbish fearmongering to me to talk about botulism being endemic to Eskimo (raw meat) diets instead of the modernized, plasticized versions thereof. We get that sort of stuff from newbies and trolls quite a lot, which I expect and with which we will just have to put up with if we want to allow newbs to join. It's inexcusable when relatively veteran members engage in it, especially after Tyler and others have tirelessly quashed such anti-RAF nonsense repeatedly in the past.
I am glad Josh posted this article.
The article is excellent, I agree with most of it, I quoted it extensively myself, I'm also glad it was posted, and I have posted a similar article in the past myself (I think it was at the Dirty Carnivore forum). I only disagree with the misleading thread title and certain of the mis-interpretations and assumptions and a snippet of text in the article. I'm not arguing against the article, I'm saying that it supports what I'm saying and I have posted similar stuff myself in the past. It's so strongly supports what I've been saying that I don't need any other sources, as I stated. The overall picture that the article gives is NOT that botulism is endemic to traditional Eskimo diets like the thread title suggested it might be (and if you truly think it is, are you going to avoid all aged and high raw meat and fish?) On the contrary, the impression it gives is that using MODERN food storage and processing techniques and a lack of traditional knowledge has led to a dramatic increase in botulism cases among Eskimos eating raw sea animal foods. Why would any of us bother with raw animal foods stored with reasonable precautions (such as those suggested by Aajonus and Tyler) if botulism were endemic to them? Show me the evidence. The article doesn't provide any for that--quite the contrary, it makes the case for following traditional Eskimo practices and avoiding modern practices. As usual, when you dig into the details behind the headlines, you find that the fearmongering headlines are not justified by the facts.