The notion that our instincts work for raw meat but not raw dairy is IMO absurd.
Well said. It is a natural raw food substance that our alliesthetic instincts should work with, if GCB is correct about food instincts.
The Japanese never ate beef till recently
Are you talking just about bovines, or red meat in general and pork, etc.? Have you heard about the ancient Jomon, Ainu and Yayoi meat-eating peoples, from whom most of today's Japanese descend?
"The Jomon period (... Jomon jidai?) is the time in Prehistoric Japan from about 14,000 BC[1][2] to about 300 BC, when Japan was inhabited by a hunter-gatherer culture which reached a considerable degree of sedentism and cultural complexity." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jomon_people
"The main concern of Jomon people was the hunting of larger game such as deer (Cervus sp.) and wild boai (Sus sp.). This view is supported by the evidence that these are dominant species in midden deposits of Jomon sites and their nutritional value per individual is much higher than the other species (e.g., K. Hayashi, 1971; Nishimoto, 1978)." http://www.um.u-tokyo.ac.jp/publish_db/Bulletin/no27/no27006.html
"The Ainu have been depicted as "mysterious proto-Caucasians" unrelated to Japanese people. However, DNA research shows that Ainu are the direct descendants of the Jomon, the ancient people who created Japan's first culture and one of the world's oldest extant potteries. This means that the Ainu and present-day Japanese are biologically related." http://www.japanfocus.org/-Chisato__Kitty_-Dubreuil/2589
"The Ainu ... also called Aynu, Aino ..., and in historical texts Ezo ..., are an indigenous people in Japan (Hokkaido) and Russia (Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands). ... The Ainu were a society of hunter-gatherers, who lived mainly by hunting and fishing, and the people followed a religion based on phenomena of nature.[9 NOVA Online – Island of the Spirits – Origins of the Ainu". Retrieved on May 8, 2008.]" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ainu_people#Hunting
Genetic kinship found between Ainu and native Okinawans, http://ajw.asahi.com/article/behind_news/social_affairs/AJ201211010059
"the Yayoi, intermarried with the native Jomon people on Honshu and Kyushu. Most people in Japan today carry the genetic fingerprints of both groups. However, characteristics of the original Jomon genome are more prevalent in the Ainu and native Okinawans."
"Apart from rice, however, pigs and dogs also entered Japan, and so did the habit of using them for food [by the Yayoi]." http://www.rekihaku.ac.jp/english/publication/titles/titles_pdf/070006.pdf
Even if you're just talking about bovines, does anyone think that the kobe beef that were introduced into Japan in the 2nd century AD were never eaten when they could no longer plow?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kobe_beefand I believe a lot of places in the world that are veges or close to it
In "vege" diets, are you including dairy, honey, insects, fungi and algae (none of which are truly plants)?
Please try to approach a wild lactating female and go to suck some milk from her.
That's not how it's done. Voila:
Adults consuming milk of wild mammals among HGs, traditional pastoralists, mature domesticated bulls, oxpeckers and feral cats:
> From The Old Way: A Story of the First People, by Elizabeth Marshall Thomas, page 23:
"When I got there, the mother gemsbok and her calf were dead and the leopard had run away. ... The mother had milk in her udder, which had four teats like goats' teats, all covered with hair, two large teats in front and two small teats behind. The two men milked her, stroking the milk veins in the bag, milking a squirt into their palm and licking it off. The gemsbok, lying on her side with one hind leg lightly raised, was so big that both men could squat below the leg to milk her. I tasted some milk, which was strong and gamey, also harsh and salty, very different from the mild, sweet milk of cows. Then the two men rolled her on her back, skinned and opened her belly, then opened the rumen. ...."
> From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comanche: "The Comanches sometimes ate raw meat, especially raw liver flavored with gall. They also drank the milk from the slashed udders of buffalo, deer, and elk. Among their delicacies was the curdled milk from the stomachs of suckling buffalo calves, and they also enjoyed buffalo tripe, or stomachs."
> This video includes footage of wild horses being rounded up and milked and the milk fermented and then consumed by Mongolians:
Nomadic life: Mongolian horse herders, BBC Human Planet.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/learningzone/clips/human-planet-nomadic-life-mongolian-horse-herders/11958.html
> Interspecies nursing--wild animals sometimes adopt and suckle the offspring of other species, albeit rarely and usually the adopted species is domesticated:
"ONE SUMMER DAY on Sanibel Island, Florida, a female raccoon led her young out of a patch of woods toward a large dumpster parked behind a resort hotel. Following her were three healthy-looking young raccoons and, bringing up the rear, one tabby kitten. Ducking under a fence around the dumpster, this unorthodox family stuck together long after it had joined a couple dozen other cats and raccoons that were feeding on the bounty of edible garbage there. ...
And adoption is not just a quirk among human beings and the occasional eccentric raccoon. From gulls, geese and bats to seals, coyotes and dolphins, all kinds of creatures have been known to take in and raise another animal's young. According to Eva Jablonka, an evolutionary biologist at Tel-Aviv University who describes the behavior in the book Animal Traditions, adoption "is certainly more common than previously thought." She and her coauthor, zoologist Eytan Avital, report that several hundred bird and mammal species at least occasionally adopt. ...
Even more difficult to explain is why an animal--such as that Sanibel Island raccoon--would adopt the offspring of a different species. Boness and Brown both suggest that the raccoon may have taken in the kitten by mistake while her own babies were very young. In captivity, dogs with young puppies have been induced to suckle cats, and cats have nursed rats. Mothers in these experiments accepted the alien offspring before their own young were old enough to move around, the point at which powerful recognition systems usually kick in.
Still, it's hard to interpret such adoptions as anything other than reproductive bloopers. According to Jablonka, biologists understand very little about cross-species adoptions in the wild. "There are few reports of this behavior," she says, "and I suspect its occurrence is underestimated."
Sometimes, when the urge to nurture overwhelms, animal parents can end up in bizarre situations. In the mid-1970s, a biologist working in Alaska observed a pair of arctic loons, which had lost their own chicks, raising five spectacled eider ducklings that might otherwise have made a decent lunch. More recently, a lioness in Kenya's Samburu National Park took in a newborn Beisa oryx--normally a prey species--then attempted to adopt a second baby oryx after game wardens took away the first." (Sharon Levy, Parenting Paradox, NATIONAL WILDLIFE MAGAZINE, Aug/Sep 2002, https://notes.utk.edu/Bio/greenberg.nsf/0/841c6ff3a204c18e852572c200586258?OpenDocument)
> "I have witnessed adult bulls "robbing" milk from lactating cows in a mixed herd." - Laura, http://onibasu.com/archives/nn/70479.html
> Feral cats steal milk from northern elephant seals
by Juan Pablo Gallo-Reynoso and Charles Leo Ortiz, 2010, http://www.academia.edu/890943/Feral_cats_steal_milk_from_northern_elephant_seals
"We have found that feral cats are also drinking elephant seal’s milk, stealing it directly from the teats of nursing females. The amount of energy obtained this way might be significant for feral cats in the northern elephant seal rookeries on the island."
The chemical substances must be in organic, unprocessed natural form and have been available in the environment of our origins.
All that is true of raw milk from wild animals.
Plus, lots of folks here and elsewhere report good results from the best forms of dairy, with notable rare exceptions, such as yourself and Tyler. No doubt if Tyler were available, he would castigate us for doing so and insult us with straw man claims of noble savagery and such, but the evidence is sufficiently compelling to justify keeping an open mind about raw dairy. It's not a proven case, by any means, but the accumulating evidence is increasingly difficult to ignore.
Of course, to each his own and if dairy doesn't suit you, then don't eat it. Live and let live. For me, only butter, sheep cheese and sheep yogurt seem tolerable so far, which is much less than what other folks report tolerating or even thriving on. It pains me some to have to admit that the evidence is pointing to WAPF fanatics being more right than wrong about raw dairy.