Milk is a Neolithic food. Some people can tolerate it better than others, but imo, no one should be consuming it on any kind of a regular basis, unless it comes from a woman you know whose diet you trust.
Here lies the rub. Humans do many things, many things, many things unnatural! We fly in planes! We drive in cars! Even bicycles. We floss our teeth! Drink our tea or coffee. How many here drink coffee or tea? I'd actually given it up until drinking some green tea again this last month. Where do you draw the line?
Many people, maybe not tons-o-people, but many people, probably as many as say nay, approve and swear by raw dairy. Where is the bad info about Goat milk? I haven't found it and I've looked. Cow milk? Yes, it seems.
I know, I know Geoff doesn't go for Raw Milk. Still, others do. Tolerate it? Too simple. Some people can drink it with no problem and some can't. I have never had an issue with dairy. Maybe you have and that's okay. I more than tolerate it.
Still, I'll say we don't know enough. But please remember there's a world out there that thrives on raw dairy. And of course there's
http://www.wewant2live.com/site/811618/page/884241My recommends is no matter what you think you know, try if you wish, for yourself.
Best wishes,
Avalon
oh, and if you can't drink cow milk, try Goat milk. If you can't drink Goat Milk, don't drink it. If you don't want to drink dairy at all, because taste is involved don't drink it. I like the taste of Goat milk and cheese a lot. It's not a staple, but an occasional welcomenessess.
http://community.livejournal.com/paleo_health/tag/raw+milk"The research has certainly been promising so far. Prompted by figures showing that children growing up on farms are less likely to develop allergies, scientists at the University of London gave children a couple of glasses of raw milk a week. They found that it seemed to cut their chances of developing hay fever by 10 per cent and eczema by 38 per cent. They also looked at blood samples from 4,700 primary-school children in Shropshire, and found that raw milk drinkers, most of whom lived on farms, had 60 per cent lower levels of immunoglobulin E - an antibody that the body's immune system pumps out in huge quantities on exposure to an allergen. Levels of histamine, another chemical that is released by cells during an allergic reaction, were halved."