Visited my grandmother every year when I was a kid and drinked actual milk from the cow for years. Never got sick and never heard anyone else getting sick.
The first time I bought a lottery ticket I won £100. The next time I won £1 and £1 again, even my dad won £20 that same week from the postcode lottery. Does that mean everytime anyone buys a lottery ticket they get similar results? No. I was super lucky to win so many times, and so were you. Our experiences as individuals cannot be generalised onto a whole population because they are biased and limited. Not trying to argue with you, just inform about confirmation bias.
My grandma spent most of her life on Wisconsin dairy farms and recently told me her mother (my great grandmother) always boiled the milk before giving it to the family. My grandma never understood why until I made a video on pasteurisation. It seems a lot of people who even life on farms, not always drink raw milk even though they could!
Raw milk has a different taste and texture. There are traditions for raw milk and raw milk cheeses in Europe and problems with listeria occur very occasionally, but I‘ve never heard of contaminations like campylobacter. The scale of US farming has an immanent hazard risk for contamination, especially when you consider the US hygiene standards for poultry.
Has anyone ever died of raw milk? No! have people died of alcohol? very many everyday.. yet here in Ohio selling raw milk is illegal I'm not saying raw milk is perfectly safe, I just don't think it should be illegal to sell
That's simply not true. In just England, from 1912-1937, 65,000 people died from tuberculosis from drinking raw milk. Just before WW2, raw milk made up 25% of all foodborne outbreaks in the U.S. These may be forgotten diseases but this is because almost all milk is pasteurised now. Here's a good source www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4890836/
@@AbbeytheFoodScientist Note that you have to go back so far to when man was much more to blame than any natural raw milk taken from cows. This is back when cows, in over crowded conditions in industrialized farms, were fed swill. Look up swill scandal if you don't know what swill is and save the propaganda links that, like you, ignore real causes and facts. There's a reason they're forgotten diseases. Raw milk hasn't changed but the crap that was allowed to be ADDED to raw milk and the crap the cows were fed has changed.
@@AbbeytheFoodScientist and prior to the mid 1800's, people consumed raw dairy for thousands of years without problems. It's almost as if something changed during the 1800's, but ignorance is bliss, isn't it?
@@sped2942 people in the 1800s died all of the time and had no idea what they died from. It's almost like we obtain new information daily. You're just a moron who operates on confirmation bias.
How do you feel about New Moms breast feeding their new born breast milk, How about eating fresh fruits from trees or vegetable from your gardens or here is one for you how about honey. It was also nice for you to mention that farm workers are dirty people.
Hi, humans are naturally resistant to the bacteria in moms breastmilk because it contains molecules specialised for human babies to protect them. Cow milk doesn't contain these for humans, only for cows. Microorganisms that grow in fresh fruit or vegetables are often not harmful to humans because humans and plants are so different and the microorganisms are only targeting the plants therefore dont have the tools to hurt us. Honey is actually very inhospitable to microorganisms due to its high sugar content which is why we can foods with sugar as a preservative. Honey is therefore generally safe to humans, just not toddlers and babies due to their weaker immune systems
I didn't mean to insinuate farm workers are dirty in anyway. Just simply saying a space with lots of animals tends to be more dirty. And infants drinking breast milk is quite different. First, it's directly fed to them from their mother and it includes bioactive compounds that help the infant's immune system develop/stay healthy. Cow's milk is quite different from human milk.