Are you worried about eating endotoxins? It is something to be worried about. The solution is in the quality of your food. Get the good stuff. Pay a little more, eat a little less.
Around here, I think you'll find we love bacteria! Our bodies are full of bacteria. Almost literally full of it -- and yet we are very healthy! And our ancestors ate lots of fermented foods loaded with bacteria. So, right there we know there is some faulty reasoning somewhere with that video. Most bacteria are very good for us -- for the same reasons in the video. The dead bacteria carry epigenetic information that is vital to our health.
His video highlights a good reason to be mindful of the source of your food, the quality of your food, and the health of your food. The good stuff is good for you. Sick meat will likely make you sick, as well. I'm no expert in endotoxins, but I suspect those are the poisons of pathogenic bacteria, in other words, the wrong kind of bacteria. The good bacteria would not produce unhealthy toxins. Otherwise, how could our ancestors have lived so vitally? Conventionally raised animal products, in which the animal is very sick due to poor diet and poor environment, is likely to be overrun with pathogenic bacteria that would produce endotoxins detrimental to our health.
Did you know they purposely inoculate feedlot-raised beef with endotoxins in order to make them grow fatter and faster. It also makes the cows very sick -- but who cares about that! Americans will eat anything that can be made to taste good.
Bottomline: Don't be swayed by these 'test-tube,' narrow-minded scientists. You know that extremely healthy people ate meat for thousands of years. You know fermented foods are among the most healthy. And, now you're leaning that bacteria -- the good bacteria -- are your friend. Therefore, you know that the science is off in some way, or based on a faulty assumption. In this case I believe the assumption is that feedlot raised, sick animal meat is 'normal,' or should be the basis for further conclusions.
If all I had to eat was conventionally-raised, sick animals, gosh, I don't know what I'd do. I might just become a vegetarian as well.