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Dear Vicki,

An interesting question! Certainly people with wheat intolerances are often

ok with organically grown wheat, or with older varieties of wheat such as

spelt. Why do we have so many problems with milk products when they have

been considered beneficial in Ayurveda for thousands of years? It could be

genetic differences between Europeans and Indians, but milk was considered

healthy in Europe until recently too. I think it is artificial hormones and

other chemicals contaminating the milk as you suggested, but also the fact

that milk here and now is always pasteurized and usually homogenized as

well. It feels very different to drink raw milk. Then there is the whole

issue of antibiotic use leading to candida overgrowth, and how that creates

intolerances and allergies. I¹m sure you are right about effects of

breastfeeding and babies being introduced to foods too early as well, and

I¹ve always thought that bringing children up in an overly sterile

environment is bad for healthy development of the immune system. Perhaps

all of these factors have a big role in CFS and other immune disorders which

seem to be so prevalent now.

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Dear , There is also the issue in ayuvedic medicine that the milk is

not always bovine. From listening to an Sri Lankan doctor talking about milk

it is obvious that they use the milk of many different animals for its

therapeutic properties so you don't have the same degree of exposure.

Allshorn

Food intolerances

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Hi Benn,

At 18:34 13/02/2004, you wrote:

>Milk - rearing cattle is now a different science that in history; again

>husbandry and production from the milk are the issues. In the USA cattle

>are bred then passed to feedlots where they are fed grains and pellets

>to fatten them before slaughter; both are unnatural to cattle diets,

>particularly where the pellets contain protein from pig, dog, cat,

>horse, chicken, sheep and sometimes cattle, flesh; I can't help thinking

>there may be similar practices in the UK.

If that were so, it would be completely illegal. Feeding of meat and bone

meal to ruminants was banned in 1988 at the height of the BSE epidemic.

>One of the concerns about BSE

> & CJD variant is the crossing of scrapie to cattle and so humans.

The scrapie theory hangs on, even though countless attempts to generate BSE

in cattle experimentally, including feeding and injecting scrapie brain

tissue into cow brains, have failed.

All the best,

Krystyna

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>>Milk - rearing cattle is now a different science that in history; again

>>husbandry and production from the milk are the issues. In the USA cattle

>>are bred then passed to feedlots where they are fed grains and pellets

>>to fatten them before slaughter; both are unnatural to cattle diets,

>>particularly where the pellets contain protein from pig, dog, cat,

>>horse, chicken, sheep and sometimes cattle, flesh; I can't help thinking

>>there may be similar practices in the UK.

>

>If that were so, it would be completely illegal. Feeding of meat and bone

>meal to ruminants was banned in 1988 at the height of the BSE epidemic.

Hi Krystyna,

Thank you for the correction to my surmise; the situation in the USA I

gathered from " Fast Food Nation " and was up to date in 2001.

Re: BSE, also thanks for the comments; another theory I've come across

centred on the effects of agrochemicals on cattle rather than (just)

foodstuffs.

Benn

--

Benn Abdy- MCPP

Medical Herbalist

Windsor, Newquay, London

0 or 07957 65 88 90

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