Monday, October 2, 2006

ARE YOU STILL DRINKING THAT STUFF?

It always amazes me to discover just how many consumers have been brainwashed by dairy industry advertising into thinking that milk from cows is some sort of essential food for humans. In reality, cow's milk is perfect nutrition for baby cows, but nutritionally incompatible with humans, most of whom are actually allergic to the substance.


Humans are the only species that will drink the mammary gland extract of another species. And we didn't even choose a species close to us like monkeys or gorillas. No, we've chosen to drink milk from furry, four-legged creatures mostly because they're the easiest ones to control and dope up with synthetic hormones that turn them into milk-generating machines for profit-motivated dairy operations.


All commercial milk from cows contains pus and blood, by the way. The USDA actually sets allowable limits of pus as a federal standard. (Check MilkSucks.com to see how much pus is found in milk in your State!) And that's not to mention the toxic chemicals, PCBs, pesticides, perchlorate and other substances frequently found in milk products. Even if they were somehow free of these chemicals, nearly all commercially-produced milk is pasteurized and homogenized -- a process that turns milk fats into artery-clogging substances that promote heart disease and atherosclerosis.


Yet western populations chug milk by the gallon, and then the people wonder why they suffer
from Irritable Bowel Syndrome, obesity, heart disease, sinusitis, acne, constipation and even diabetes. The answer is cow's milk, folks. You'd be better off drinking human milk, but even that's only for babies.


Truly, drinking milk from cows is about as silly as pushing a baby calf away from its mother and sucking on the teat yourself. Which is, of course, the very concept this comic is attempting to portray.


Another thing… paid for advertisements for milk suggest that milk is good for bones. Did you know that milk produces an acidic residue in the body after consumption? The result is a direct, negative effect on your bones. Science is now shedding light on the link between milk consumption and osteoporosis. How is that possible? Isn’t milk supposed to be good for bones? Apparently not!


Signed up for the nutrition seminar yet?


Speak up and educate others
Dr. Craig


Seminar signup at the front deskP.S. NUTRITION SEMINAR… MONDAY… 6:30-7:30… PLEASE ATTEND!