 As I’m sure most of you know by now, there are very few subjects as
emotionally charged as the choice of one’s diet. Sexual relations,
marriage and finances come to mind as similarly charged subjects and,
like diet, we are all sure we know all we need to know about each of
these subjects. The subject of milk, as I have discovered during the
past four years, when properly viewed will challenge every notion you
currently have about what is good food and what isn’t. The story of
milk is complex and goes something like this.
Back in the pre-processed food era (that is before about 1930 in this
country) milk was considered an important food, especially for
children. Not only was there an entire segment of our economy built up
around milk but, as I remember, each house had its own milk chute for
the delivery of fresh milk directly to the house. It was unquestioned
that milk was good for us and that a safe, plentiful milk supply was
actually vital to our national health and well-being. It was also a
time (now I’m referring to the early part of the century) when many of
the illnesses which we currently suffer from were rare.
As an example, family doctors would often go their whole careers
without ever seeing a patient with significant coronary artery disease,
breast or prostate cancer, whereas current doctors can hardly go one
month without encountering a patient with such an illness. Furthermore,
as scientists such as Weston Price, DDS discovered, there were pockets
of extremely healthy, long-lived people scattered about the earth who
used dairy products in various forms as the staple of their diets —
further evidence that milk and its by-products were amongst the most
healthful foods man has ever encountered.
If we fast forward to the 1980’s, we now find an entirely different
picture. For one thing, there have been numerous books written in the
past decade about the dangers of dairy products — the most influential
being a book by Frank Oski, MD, the current chairman of paediatrics of
Johns Hopkins University and perhaps the most influential
paediatricians in this country. It’s called Don’t Drink Your Milk. In
it Oski pins just about every health problem in children to the
consumption of milk, everything from acute and chronic ear infections,
constipation, asthma, eczema, and so on. Secondly, just about all
patients I have now in their initial visit proudly announce that they
have a good diet and that, specifically, they don’t eat dairy (which
they pronounce with such disdain).
One might well ask where the truth in this picture. Perhaps the
experiments of Dr. Francis Pottenger in the 1940’s can help to solve
this mystery. In these experiments Dr. Pottenger fed one group of cats
a diet consisting of raw milk, raw meat and cod liver oil. Other groups
were given pasteurized milk, evaporated milk or sweetened condensed
milk instead of raw milk. The results were conclusive and astounding.
Those that ate raw milk and raw meat did well and lived long, happy,
active lives free of any signs of degenerative disease. Those cats on
pasteurized milk suffered from acute illnesses (vomiting, diarrhea) and
succumbed to every degenerative disease now flourishing in our
population, even though they were also getting raw meat and cod liver
oil. By the 3rd generation a vast majority of the cats were infertile
and exhibited “anti-social” behavior — in short, they were like modern
Americans.
Since the 40’s the “qualities” of milk have been extensively studied to
try to find an explanation for these dramatic changes. Studies have
shown that before heating, milk is a living food rich in colloidal
minerals and enzymes necessary for the absorption and utilization of
the sugars, fats and minerals in the milk. For example, milk has an
enzyme called phosphatase that allows the body to absorb the calcium
from the milk. Lactase is an enzyme that allows for the digestion of
lactose.
Butterfat has a cortisone-like factor which is heat sensitive
(destroyed by heat) that prevents stiffness in the joints. Raw milk
contains beneficial bacteria as well as lactic acids that allow these
beneficial bacteria to implant in the intestines. All of these
qualities are destroyed during pasteurization. Once heated, milk
becomes rotten, with precipitated minerals that can’t be absorbed
(hence osteoporosis), with sugars that can’t be digested (hence
allergies), and with fats that are toxic.
Raw milk has been used as a therapy in folk medicine — and even in the
Mayo Clinic — for centuries. It has been used in the pre-insulin days
to treat diabetes (I’ve tried it — it works), as well as eczema,
intestinal worms, allergies, and arthritis, all for reasons which can
be understood when we realize just what is in milk — such as the
cortisone-like factor for allergies and eczema.
Another way we ruin milk is by feeding cows high protein feed made from
soybeans and other inappropriate foodstuffs. Rarely is anyone truly
allergic to grass-fed cow’s milk.
Fresh raw milk, from cows eating well-manured green grass is a living
unprocessed whole food. Compare this to the supposedly “healthy” soy
milk which has been washed in acids and alkalis, ultrapasteurized, then
allowed to sit in a box for many months.
The Pottenger cat studies provide a simple but profound lesson for all
Americans: Processed, dead foods don’t support life or a happy
well-functioning society. We must return to eating pure, wholesome,
unprocessed foods, including whole raw milk from pasture fed cows.
In my practice I ALWAYS start there — I encourage, insist, even beg
people to eat real foods— no matter what the problem. Often with just
this intervention the results are gratifying. SO, find a cow, find a
farmer, make sure the cow (or goat, llama, or whatever) is healthy and
start your return to good health!
Author:
Thomas S Cowan MD
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