We need money to stay online, if you like the forum, donate! x

rooshvforum.network is a fully functional forum: you can search, register, post new threads etc...
Old accounts are inaccessible: register a new one. x


Do You Eat Dairy?
#47

Do You Eat Dairy?

Milk is a dead food -- period. Unless you live in one of the few states where you can buy it raw. Milk is boiled to kill all bacteria. Guess what? Boiling the milk also kills anything nutritious -- including the enzymes that you body needs to digest the milk. That is why lactose intolerant people can drink raw milk, but not pasteurized milk.

When you are young, your body can produce and replace the enzymes that the dead (pasteurized) milk no longer contains. If you eat and drink a great deal of dairy products, you will lose the ability to produce those enzymes as you age. That is why people become lactose intolerant as they age. Stay away from dead dairy products and eat only live dairy products. I speak from experience.

Live dairies are clean out of necessity. Dead dairies are pig sties with feces and mucus in the milk. Who cares. The boiling will kill all the bacteria. Have fun drinking the boiled feces and bacteria.

You can thank government intervention in the free market for all these problems. If you want more information, read "The Milk Book: The Milk of Human Kindness Is Not Pasteurized" by by William Campbell Douglass II, MD.

Quote:Quote:

If you knew what we know about milk ... BLEEECHT! All that pasteurization, homogenization and processing is not only cooking all the nutrients right out of your favorite drink. It's also adding toxic levels of vitamin D. This fascinating book tells the whole story about milk. How it once was nature's nearly perfect food. . . how "raw," unprocessed milk can heal and boost your immune system ~ why you can't buy it legally in this country anymore, and what we could do to change that.

http://www.amazon.com/Milk-Book-Human-Ki...+milk+book
Reply


Messages In This Thread

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)