Guest guest Posted June 29, 2005 Report Share Posted June 29, 2005 Here's some information about milk and dairy I was able to glean from Masson. Apparently, he makes no distinction between raw or pasteurized milk/dairy (I don't know if this omission really impairs his observations). He seems to be talking about milk from all ruminants, including cows, sheep, goats. Also, he seems rather indifferent to metabolic types. I want to share this with you, but I am not selling any of this as the final judgement on milk and dairy. He doesn't mention kefir. 1. No animal in nature drinks milk after being weaned, and no animal suffers from a bone disease if he is submitted to his ancestral diet and lifestyle. 2. The peoples from Asia who haven't drunk milk for many years don't suffer from a bone condition (or only very rarely), especially not from osteoporosis. 3. The peoples who consume a lot of milk, cheese and yoghurt [he goes on to mention Americans, Swedes and the Dutch] provide the largest contingent of individuals suffering from osteoporosis and prone to hip fractures after they are over 50. 4. There are two elements to account for the bone alterations produced by milk and dairy: a) milk contains a factor – the parathyroid related peptide – which activates the osteoclasts [cells which destroy bone tissue]; the antibiotics given to the animal are mainly expelled in the milk and are poison for the osteoblasts [cells which build bone tissue]. 5. The more you consume milk, cheese and yoghurt, the higher the concentration of plasmatic homocysteine in the blood. Plasmatic homocysteine has a role in precipitating cholesterol into the arterial intima. The proteins rather than the fats (butter) in milk are responsible for that. 6. Lactose isn't always entirely broken down by lactase into glucose and galactose and goes into the bloodstream. The not-broken- down lactose can generate cataract in the crystalline lens. 7. Milk proteins increase the production of serotonin which in turn aggravate all inflammatory conditions. 8. Milk, cheese and yoghurt seem to activate the production of estrogens for women and may lead to mastoiditis, ovarian cysts, fibromas and hormone-related cancers. 9. Milk from ruminants contain very hard-to-digest casein. The proteins of milk are broken down into peptides and then aminoacids. In a normal condition, about one thousandth of these proteins should go into the bloodstream. In this case, they would have a healthy role in stimulating intestinal immunity. But in reality an excessive amount of proteins from milk go into the bloodstream, and this is the origin of allergic, " auto-immunogenic " , inflammatory and infectious diseases. I hope this clarifies a few things. I apologize for my poor translation from French into English and the use of so many technical terms. José Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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