Maintenance Phase

Raw Milk

66 min
Nov 13, 20255 months ago
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Summary

This episode examines the raw milk movement, tracing its history from 19th-century disease outbreaks through modern regulatory battles. The hosts explain how pasteurization eliminated deadly pathogens like tuberculosis and listeria, then explore why raw milk consumption is resurging despite scientific evidence of 150x higher foodborne illness rates compared to pasteurized milk.

Insights
  • Raw milk advocates misinterpret farm effect research (which doesn't specify raw vs. pasteurized milk) to justify consumption, despite thin scientific evidence
  • The raw milk movement leverages anti-government sentiment and distrust of science amplified by COVID-era vaccine skepticism, creating a symbiotic relationship with right-wing political movements
  • Regulatory capture and weak FDA enforcement enable illegal interstate raw milk sales through mail order and buyer clubs, despite federal bans and consent decrees
  • Small dairy farmers adopt raw milk as a differentiation strategy to compete with corporate dairy margins, creating economic incentives for risky products
  • Raw milk regulation has reversed in recent years despite 100+ years of evidence of harm, driven by foundation-backed legal defense funds and influencer amplification
Trends
Resurgence of pre-pasteurization diseases (tuberculosis, listeria, diphtheria) in raw milk consumers and their childrenPoliticization of food safety as a culture war issue aligned with anti-vax and anti-government movementsGrowth of alternative distribution channels (milk clubs, herd shares, mail order) to circumvent state/federal bansInfluencer-driven health misinformation on TikTok, YouTube, and alternative platforms (Rumble, Gab) promoting raw milkState-level regulatory rollback: 4 states allowed retail raw milk sales in 2007 vs. many coastal and Western states todayWeaponization of legal defense funds and media relations to reframe regulatory enforcement as government overreachIntegration of raw milk advocacy with tradwife aesthetic and paleo/ancestral health movementsBird flu contamination in raw milk supply with denial of viral transmission risk by producers
Topics
Pasteurization science and historyFoodborne illness outbreaks linked to raw milkFDA regulatory authority and interstate commerce restrictionsState-level raw milk sales bans and permitsWeston A. Price Foundation influence on raw milk advocacyFarm effect research and allergies in childrenAvian flu transmission through raw milkMilk club and herd share legal workaroundsRaw milk marketing and influencer endorsementsListeria and tuberculosis transmission risksCertification vs. pasteurization as food safety approachesCOVID-era anti-science sentiment and raw milk consumptionDairy industry consolidation and small farmer competitionPrenatal nutrition claims and Weston A. Price ideologyRFK Jr. and Trump administration food safety policy
Companies
Altadena Dairy
Major California dairy that faced dozens of recalls for contaminated raw milk causing 22 deaths; landmark case in FDA...
Raw Farm USA
California raw milk producer founded by Mark McAfee; shipped raw milk illegally across state lines labeled as pet food
Weston A. Price Foundation
Non-profit advocacy organization promoting raw milk as 'real milk' and funding legal defense for raw milk producers
Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund
Legal advocacy arm of Weston A. Price Foundation providing defense for raw milk farmers and promoting legalization in...
Campaign for Real Milk
Weston A. Price Foundation initiative promoting raw milk with claims of built-in safety systems and pathogen-killing ...
Public Citizen
Consumer watchdog group founded by Ralph Nader that filed impact litigation against Altadena for false advertising cl...
Macy's
Department store owned by Nathan Strauss, who led 1907 campaign to ban raw milk in New York City
Abraham and Strauss
Major New York department store chain owned by Nathan Strauss, who championed raw milk pasteurization policy
FDA
Federal agency that banned interstate raw milk sales in 1987 but faces enforcement challenges due to resource constra...
Organic Pastures Dairy Company
California raw milk producer rebranded as Raw Farm USA; faced federal criminal charges for illegal interstate sales
Turning Point USA
Conservative organization that sold 'got raw milk' merchandise promoting raw milk consumption
Whole Foods
Retailer mentioned as selling raw milk products in California
People
Louis Pasteur
19th-century scientist who developed pasteurization technique for alcohol; method later applied to milk safety
Nathan Strauss
Led 1907 campaign to ban raw milk in New York City; built pasteurization plant on orphanage reducing child mortality
Robert Koch
Identified three types of tuberculosis germs in 1882, including bovine TB spread through milk to humans
Franz von Zaxlet
First to suggest pasteurization for milk in 1886, 22 years after Pasteur applied it to alcohol
Weston A. Price
Published 'Nutrition and Physical Degeneration' (1939) promoting high-fat diets; namesake of raw milk advocacy founda...
Mary Enig
Nutritional scientist co-founder of foundation; promoted fringe views including coconut oil as HIV/AIDS treatment
Sally Fallon Morell
English literature graduate who co-founded foundation and authored 'The Contagion Myth' denying germ theory
Mark McAfee
Major raw milk producer; faced federal criminal charges for illegal interstate sales; claims bird flu poses no health...
Amos Miller
Refuses to obtain required permit; illegally ships raw milk across state lines through buyer's clubs; aligned with We...
Ralph Nader
Founded Public Citizen which filed landmark litigation against Altadena for false raw milk safety claims
Paul Saladino
High-profile raw milk endorser who recommends feeding raw milk to infants and raw liver consumption
Joe Rogan
Publicly endorses raw milk consumption; conflates raw milk with pasteurized milk in discussions
Marjorie Taylor Greene
Acknowledges pseudo-science claims around raw milk but advocates for more research funding
Thomas Massie
Kentucky Republican who introduced bill to overturn FDA ban on interstate raw milk sales
RFK Jr.
Keynote speaker at Weston A. Price Foundation conferences; aligned with raw milk advocacy movement
Owen Shroyer
Promoted raw milk conspiracy theories on InfoWars platform claiming FDA wants to ban raw milk
Liz Ritesig
Major popularizer of milk clubs; supporter of raw milk freedom writers movement
John Lucy
Quoted defending pasteurization as common sense, not ultra-processing; heating milk to 160°F for 15 seconds
Quotes
"Pasteurization is only heating a liquid to well below boiling temperatures in order to kill germs that can make you very sick."
HostEarly in episode
"Raw milk was linked to 150 times more outbreaks than pasteurized milk."
Host, citing CDC studyMid-episode
"Between 1895 and 1897, while the 3,900 children were being fed supposedly safe raw milk, 1,509 of them died."
Host, citing Milk! bookHistorical example
"Real milk, milk that is pasture raised full fat and unprocessed, is an inherently safe food."
Campaign for Real Milk websiteWeston A. Price Foundation quote
"Show me one person who's ever gotten sick from raw milk with avian flu. Viruses don't exist in raw milk."
Mark McAfeeResponse to bird flu recall
Full Transcript
I'm so curious how you're gonna make a real episode out of this. I know we were talking yesterday and you were like, I don't know how this is an episode and I was like, yeah, it's not just an episode, there's so much of it that I'm having a really hard time editing it down. I was at the Louvre with some people today and I was like, I have to leave early because I'm recording a podcast, they're like, what's it about? And I said, raw milk. And there's like this long side and so they sort of cock their heads like a golden retriever. They're like, you gotta leave for that. You're recording like three hours on raw milk? I'm here instead of the Louvre tonight, Aubrey. You better make it better. You better make it cultured. Why? Why? You're probably in a fact check this one. Oh great. I'm not gonna say that I'm not gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that I'm gonna say that So today we're talking about raw milk. I was gonna ask you if you've tracked the raw milk debate at all and you were like, I always think there's an episode there. I think that might be my answer to how much you've tracked it. Because we talked about this with the honey, the blue zones honey shit, because pasteurization... I think people think it's a science word, but all it means is taking something up to a temperature and then cooling it down to kill the bacteria. It's not like a big scary, like quote unquote processing thing, like the ultra processed foods, whatever. It's like the most basic shit. Pastrosation is only heating a liquid to well below boiling temperatures in order to kill germs that can make you very sick. Mm-hmm. Pastrosation today lasts for less than a minute. You're raising the temperature of milk for a matter of seconds, and it kills a ton of germs. It kills E. coli, Salmanella, Listeria, Diphtheria, Strap. Fucking tuberculosis. Oh, nice. Is it raw milk? tuberculosis. On top of killing all those germs, it also extends shelf life pretty considerably. It's very funny to classify this as this like unnatural process when it's like people like figured, even if they didn't know the science, people like kind of figured this out like a long time ago. Right. It's as unnatural as me like applying heat to other foods to cook them. I know. And I also think a lot of people don't know that prior to pastrosation, it was like a common step in recipes to be like, you use in milk, boil it first, maybe. Oh, I didn't know that actually. People have been heating liquids to kill germs for like a thousand years before pastrosation. Really, really a long time. It's not like a Western concept. No, it's also not a Western concept. The like earliest record that I found was in the 1100s in both China and Japan. Right. It's like saying like don't give in to like Western bullshit, eat like raw chicken breast. So on top of those existing pathogens in milk, we now have bird flu in milk. Oh, God, do we? I didn't even know that. Yep. When cows contract avian flu, their highest concentrations of the virus are in their memories. Like the song from cats. Memories. Sorry. I'm cutting that. I'm cutting that. That's for you. Thank you. The good news is that we know that pastrosation is effective in killing H5N1, which is the avian flu virus. As of last November, avian flu was in 505 herds of dairy cows in 15 states. Okay. The USDA is no longer publicly reporting info on avian flu in cows. So the fuck knows where we're at now. Feel so good. Yeah, I feel so safe. Sale of infected milk has also not been federally banned. Like bird flu infected milk has not been federally banned because they are simply too busy firing everyone. I was saving my wee live in hells for later in the episode, but we truly do live in hell. When I started researching this, I really thought we were talking about sort of food poisoning level events. That's part of it, but there can also be long term and permanent effects from these pathogens. According to the FDA, Listeria, which is one of the common pathogens in raw milk, Listeria in pregnant people can lead to stillbirth and miscarriage. Yeah, Listeria is really, really rough stuff. Yeah. E. coli can lead to HUS, which can cause kidney failure and tuberculosis. So there's a book that I read for this called Milk exclamation point. That was an extreme milk. That's such a good idea. Mets. Jab. Kudos. In that book, the book was great, and I really loved reading this history of milk. And every time someone was like, what are you reading? I was like, this awesome history of milk. Milk just like glaze over. So in this book, they write quote, bovine tuberculosis, a disease found in cattle is transmitted to humans through milk. It attacks the glands and testons and bones. Children are particularly susceptible and are often kept in braces for years to keep their spines from becoming deformed. It's what it was like destructive diseases of like human kind. And it's like such a miracle that it's not a live issue anymore. It's such a huge advancement for humankind. And yet we have all these grifters just being like, was that really good? Let's bring it back. I mean, I think in this way, a lot of the raw milk stuff kind of follows a similar path to a lot of the anti-vaxx stuff, which is just like, I haven't personally seen a child with tuberculosis. How bad can it be? Yeah, exactly. The CDC has conducted a number of reviews on foodborne illness outbreaks linked to dairy products. One of those covered a 13 year period. This is from 1993 to 2006. They covered all 50 states. The study's authors concluded that raw milk was linked to 150 times more outbreaks than pasteurized milk. No way. They also found that states where raw milk sale was legal, had twice the incidence of foodborne illness outbreaks related to dairy, versus states where raw milk is restricted or banned. That's crazy, because raw milk is not that big of a market. So if they're having these like huge outbreaks, that means that it's a small number of people, but much more likely to get sick. That's exactly right. Milk consumption overall has been trending downward in the US since like the 70s. In Houston. People are no longer, I mean, you can sort of see it culturally, right? Like when we were kids, there would be like families where you'd be like, your drink to go with dinner is a glass of milk. Is that not true anymore? I don't think so. Is it all like monster energy now? Is that what the kids are thinking? It's all oat milk for these soy boys. So milk consumption overall has been trending downward for like 50 years, but raw milk consumption appears to be on the rise. Right. According to analysis from the University of Delaware consumer data showed a 21% increase in raw milk sales from 2023 to 2024. Since that's a relative statistic, I'm assuming that's from like a very low baseline. Yes, it is a low baseline. So an analysis of two pretty large scale and nationally representative FDA surveys in 2016 and 2019 gave us a pretty good window into what raw milk consumption looks like. 4.4% of American adults said that they had consumed raw milk in the last year and 1% reported consuming raw milk weekly. Okay, that is like thank God, like blessedly small. Totally, it's a small number of people, but then when you're like 150 times the likelihood of goodness outbreak, like woof. On the thing about milk consumption falling in general, I do I think where if I'm getting like a brownie or a cookie at like a cafe, I will order like a glass of milk with it because like a cookie and milk is hella good. It used to be that cafes and stuff would have like listed on the menu a glass of milk, but now they don't even know like what to charge me. Often times they'll just like give me a glass of milk. Wokeness has gone too far Michael. I love it. I'll take some free milk in my cookie. There are a lot of claims from Maha types currently about pasteurization making milk less nutritious, but the science just doesn't bear that out. Also, how much nutrition do you fucking need from milk? Right, certainly losing out of some B12 is like worth it to not get sick. So a 2011 systematic review looked at 40 studies, pasteurization decreased the amount of vitamins E, C and some B vitamins and folate, and it increased the concentration of vitamin A. So on its face, it looks like it's true that pasteurization can reduce the amount of some vitamins in milk. However, those vitamins exist in raw milk in very small quantities. What exactly? A couple of four examples. Pasteurization reduces the amount of vitamin C in milk. Okay, but a full pint of raw milk contains 0% of your vitamin C for the day. Oh, wow. Okay. Vitamin E, that same full pint of raw milk gets you to 3% of your recommended daily allowance. Pasteurized milk gets you to 2%. Also, you know this from the last episode that I'm in vitamin E truth or... Usually we're eating less about vitamin E than you should about fucking tuberculosis and like, listuria, like bugs in your juice. Smahotypes also argue that pasteurization kills off like enzymes and probiotics and all kinds of stuff. Overwhelmingly, those things are pathogens. The things that they're like, oh no, it's killing this off the thing. Right, those are things that will make you sick. I'm so sorry. By probiotics, I mean tuberculosis. The diptheria. Most things you eat don't have like live probiotics and again, like the probiotics is also kind of weird. It's like, you just don't need to think about this that much. And now, Michael, we're gonna get in the wayback machine and we're gonna talk through the history of the raw milk debate particularly in the US. We're gonna start with the birth of a man named Louis Pasteur. Louis Pasteur. Wait, are we actually? We're gonna talk about Pasteur for a minute. I'm kind of an expert because I'm in France right now. So like, I can just... Oh my god. I'll just walk us through the part. Do you want me to like close my notes? You tell me about pasteurization and about Louis Pasteur. I speak three words of French. So like, I'm actually quite hard to do this part. The thing is, that's actually why I'm here. The French government heard me pronounce Pré- I'm a share. No. And they were like, that's so good. We're inviting you as a diplomatic trip to this country. You're such a fucking, you're such a little troll. Even for me, I struggle to pronounce like English words. I can't... French is like a particularly bad area for me. So as you mentioned, Louis Pasteur was a 19th century scientist and chemistry professor from France. He was working at the dawn of germ theory kind of catching on. In 1864, he took on a distiller as a client. This distiller makes beat alcohol out of beats. Alcat? The distiller wanted help figuring out why his alcohol kept turning sour so quickly. Oh. Pasteur helped identify the culprit, which was lactic yeast, and found that heeding the beet juice for just a few minutes before fermenting it, killed that yeast and allowed it to last longer. Beats by Dr. Pasteur? No. Boom. Oh, it's so bad and I liked it so much. And now you would. The spark is still alive. Oh my god. We've still got it. Pasteur figured out pasteurization and mostly applied it to wine and beer alcohol with the main use of pasteurization early on. It was other scientists who figured out the application to milk. In 1882, a scientist named Robert Koch argued that while scientists had previously seen tuberculosis as resulting from just one germ, he identified three different tuberculosis germs. One was a rare form spread by birds. To bird kilosus. He found that there was another germ that spread TB from person to person. That one was much more common. And there was a third kind that had not previously been identified, which was TB that was spread from cows to people through milk. It's not until a German chemist named Franz von Zaxlet came along as the resident pronunciation expert. You need me to do it. Oh, thank you so much. We get a lot of feedback on how good my pronunciations are, how accurate and precise they are. Did not. I can do it. Perseverance. Franz von Zaxlet was the first to suggest that pasteurization be used for milk. And that wasn't until 1886, which was 22 years after pasteur applied it to alcohol. It took him a while to figure it out. Yeah. Totally. Also part of the reason that we call it pasteurization is by all accounts Louis Pasteur was like his own nightmare. He's like, you know I'm the guy that did this, right? You guess you're just like name it after me. Around the same time pasteurization becomes a big public health issue or not pasteurization per se, but milk sanitation, maybe milk safety becomes a big public health issue for a few reasons beyond just the the TB of it all. One is that more people were moving to cities. And that meant that rather than maintaining small herds of dairy cows for small communities that were more geographically dispersed, there were more centralized dairies with larger herds, producing larger amounts of milk and sometimes pooling milk from multiple sources. First of all, if you have a larger herd, there's more opportunities for those cows to all get TB. Right. And if you're pooling milk from multiple sources and one of those sources is contaminated and the others are not, you pool it all together and surprise that it's all contaminated, right? We saw this as a mad cow as well. Absolutely. When you have like basically one big bucket full of juice, if like one cow in the juice bucket has a problem, then like the whole bucket has a problem. Yeah. It's not until the early 1900s that pasteurization really starts to catch on as a public policy. In 1907, a group of public health advocates started proposing a ban on selling raw milk in New York City. Oh, 1907. Oh, seven. People have like known this is bad for more than 100 years. And we're just like doing it anyway. When you were like, is there an episode around this? I was like, don't get me started on the 1907 campaign, Mike. Jesus Christ. The person leading the charge on that effort was a guy named Nathan Strauss. Is this someone who you have come across? No. So this guy was the owner of Macy's and the owner of Abraham and Strauss, which was one of the biggest department stores in New York City throughout much of the 20th century. Okay. Strauss became really involved in public life. He started doing a bunch of like philanthropic work. He worked as an elected official. One of Strauss's main concerns was the public health threat of raw milk. As early as 1858, the New York Times was reporting about the dangers of what they called swill milk. Okay. The city was going through wave after wave after wave of disease outbreaks at this time. Yellow fever, cholera, like really gnarly shit. Also, they should leave raw milk legal but make them call it swill milk. To the reporting on swill milk from this era goes so fucking hard. I'm going to send you, this is from that 1858 piece. I'm sending you a quote. The health commissioners agreed with the mayor that these swill milk nuisance must be abated. I love swill milk nuisance. So there's so many like metal turns of phrase in this. Early next week, they will convene the board of health and unless all the signs fail, will operate with energy and firmness to purify the city of the stables where that disgusting stuff is manufactured, which by a scandalous and lying courtesy, we have her years called pure orange county milk and under stringent penalties prohibit its use. If the board of health has any function, this certainly is one of them. That the business of making and selling swill milk is detrimental to the public health. No sane man, not even a city inspector, can any longer doubt. It's so fascinating they're selling it as pure orange county milk, which is like the same sort of thing that they do now is like they rebrand this like basically dirty milk because that's what we should be calling it. It has something that is like sound slightly virtuous and like clean and natural. This same piece goes on to accuse swill milk farmers of making quote, diseased libles upon the fair name of cows. Well, they have tuberculosis. They also say that they'll have to quote, show cause before the board why their work of death should not be discontinued. More of this, yeah. Metal. So this is how I feel like genuinely like the FDA should talk about like people who sell raw milk. All of that is to say Strauss was not alone in his belief that raw milk was a culprit. This reporting happened 50 years before the New York campaign. Right? So like it was a well known and widely believed thing for decades that raw milk might have a role here, but it hadn't been regulated in any meaningful way, right? So it is almost like a cigarette allegory where it's like we knew this was bad, but we didn't do anything. We did like weird half measures for ages. Yep. So in 1907 Strauss proposed an ordinance to require all milk to either be pasteurized or what was called certified certified milk producers would just test their herd way more frequently. They would be held to higher food handling standards and they would submit their milk for certification from a commission of physicians. So they're getting at upstream. It's like make sure the milk is clean so you don't have to pasteurize it is like the attempt. Right, but like even if you do that, you're like that none of that guarantees that there's not going to be a cool lie in your milk. Right. Again, it's like getting more at the TB of it all. Like what's even the downside of pasteurization at this point? Part of it honestly was consumer demand. People were like a pasteurized milk taste weird. It tastes cooked. And at that point, it was cooked. Right, like we've pasteurized milk now for way less time. Right, right. So people were like, dude, raw milk tastes dope. This stuff tastes bad. I don't want to drink the stuff that tastes bad. Yeah, I wonder if it tasted closer to like how you H.T. milk tastes now. Because you can definitely like tell the difference. During the campaign Strauss told a story, this has haunted me. Haunted. I am going to send you this quote from milk exclamation point. Milk. Milk. The island was being used as an orphanage. And in order to ensure that children had a steady supply of good, clean, fresh milk, a dairy herd was maintained there. But between 1895 and 1897, while the 3,900 children were being fed supposedly safe raw milk, 1,500 and nine of them died. Holy shit. Yeah, dude. 40% of the kids died. Yes. In response to this frightening statistic Strauss built a pasteurization plant on the island. He made no attempt to change the children's diet or improve the orphanages hygiene just pasteurized the milk. The mortality rate declined from 42% of the children to 28%. Honestly, 28% still sounds real bad. I thought they would have a way better. Happy ending to this. Right. It sounds way bad, but it is a 14% reduction. Which is like a lot of kids. Just from heating up the milk a little bit for a short period of time. Right. Despite that really visceral, really heartbreaking example, the 1907 campaign failed and so did a second attempt in 1909. The band didn't pass until 1910. And again, it's not a full band. It's just like you can only sell it if it's certified. Right? In the meantime, New York got scooped by Chicago who beat him to the punch and became the first city to ban raw milk in the US. They did that in 1909, but Chicago's implementation was held up for more than five years for the same reasons that the New York band didn't pass. It's also funny like thinking about how ambitious this policymaking was compared to so much policymaking now. I mean, you're basically requiring an entire sector to like add on this very expensive process. It's good. I think much more of this kind of ambitious policymaking should take place. But now it's like anything gets proposed that has any effect on businesses. It's like decades of litigation. It's like it's so hard to do this stuff now. It's really remarkable how sort of gutsy the public policy work was. And also it did take like 50 years of knowing better and it took a super rich dude putting like all of his money and political capital into making this thing happen. I just feel more American now. Now it feels American. There we go. We got there. We got there. We did it folks. The only good things that happened are because like rich people want them. So by 1917, which was just 10 years after Strauss's first campaign on raw milk, 46 major US cities required pasteurization. Nice. From there, those city ordinances became state laws. It was a dance sensation. So even nation. And people get more accustomed to pasteurized milk and what it is like, right? By the 80s, 1980s, a commanding majority of states have either heavily restricted or outright banned sale of raw milk. So we're in like a modern era where like you basically can't get raw milk unless you like go to great hassle. That's not true. It's not yet impossible because while states have taken action at the state level, the FDA has not taken federal action. So it is still legal to sell raw milk across state lines. So even if you live in a state where it's not legal, you could mail order raw milk like I'm in Portland. I could drive across the river to Vancouver, Washington. Right. That's sort of what we're talking about at this point. So we're going to spend a little time now talking about like what got the FDA to finally take action. And that's a story that starts in the 70s and 80s with one of the biggest dairies in California and in the country, Altadena. It's funny that the thing that got them to take action was not like the deaths of many children. We'll get there. Don't worry. It's weird. If you've been to a grocery store in California in the last like 50 years, chances are they sold Altadena dairy products. Altadena remains one of the biggest dairies in the country. In the 70s and 80s, they were also one of the largest dairies selling certified raw milk. So they're doing the certification process, right? And they're selling raw milk. According to the LA Times, Altadena was subject to dozens of recalls in the space of like 10 years. Not only for products that they sold retail, but also because they supplied raw milk to other producers who then made things like Casifresco with it. And that would then get recalled. In the case of that contaminated Casifresco, that caused the deaths of 22 Angelinos. Oh, wow. Through all of this, Altadena defended itself and denied any responsibility in every step along the way, every case. Their owner was out in the press constantly referring to Altadena's raw milk as quote, the cleanest milk in the world. By clean, we do not mean it doesn't kill kids. We mean something else. The owner is also alleging in the press that this is all a conspiracy against raw milk. Which like, it kind of is. In that like there's a scientific consensus that your product is dangerous, then like yeah, kind of is like a flu shot. It's a conspiracy against the flu. Right, a bunch of parents got together just because we killed kids. I should also say this dude no longer owns Altadena. Altadena is still around. It's no longer owned by like total crack pods. So like if that's where you buy your milk, don't worry, it's not going to like a raw milk truth or anymore. And they no longer sell raw milk. They're not doing that anymore. So this all comes to ahead in 1987 when two Altadena court cases finally make kind of a meaningful dent in Altadena's reputation and in their ability to sort of do what they're going to do. One is the Paul Telford case, a 66 year old man Paul Telford was undergoing radiation for lung cancer and his doctors had him on a liquid diet. Altadena certified raw milk advertised itself as safe and clean and pure. So he was drinking it regularly for the few weeks leading up to his death. Altadena argued in court that cancer killed him but at the time of his death he had infections caused by both Salmonella and Listeria. Oh, right. I don't think the idea that somebody like that needs like more vitamins, more than they need like milk free of pathogens is insane. Yes. As a result for the first time ever, Altadena faces a court judgment finding them liable for Telford's death. Like yay, they were found liable. Boo, they were ordered to pay 40 grand to tell him it's God. Yeah. You could just like kill five or six people a year and just pay that out and keep making your product. Right. It's such a small amount. In today's dollars, that's around 113 grand. The other lawsuit that is sort of making its way through the courts around this time was filed as impact litigation by a consumer watchdog group. That watchdog group is public citizen founded by Ralph Nader. Nader's like a really like influential guy on consumer safety stuff. So public citizen filed suit against Altadena. They co-filed with the gray panthers. Do you know about the gray panthers? It's like a seniors advocacy group and I fucking love the name. It makes me so happy. There was gonna be like a combination of like black panthers and like a bunch of white people. So they were gray. You were just color mixing in your brain. The suit argued that Altadena was making false advertising claims they were marketing their raw milk products as quote, safe, healthy, wholesome and pure and as suitable for vulnerable populations like babies and sick people. It's insane. The court ultimately ruled in favor of public citizen and the gray panthers and they find Altadena liable. Okay. That ruling prompted a federal court to sort of force the FDA's hand. We've talked about this in the past that the FDA can only regulate interstate commerce things that happen within the state, fall at the state level. So back in 1973, the FDA had strongly considered a ruling that only pasteurized milk could be shipped across state lines which would have effectively banned interstate commerce of raw milk. They consider it again in 1985, but that's during the Reagan administration. And you know those fuckers aren't passing new regs, right? The public citizen ruling addressed the FDA directly and said basically look like you can do what you want, but quote, there is no longer any question of the fact that raw milk is unsafe. So they now have like judges saying publicly in high profile cases like come on. Right, Joker's nothing about this is safe. This is literally like why we have a government so that you can't just like sell a dangerous product to people. Yes, and you can't just be like, I don't know, regulation just sort of is an or a thing. So it's literally like what you're trading off is like a slight inconvenience to a corporation versus the deaths of children. Yes, it's like hard trade off. Yeah. Following the FDA ban following this sort of proliferation of state bans, people like pretty immediately try to find workarounds and they're successful. Great. In doing so. Of course they are. How do I keep doing this thing that kills kids? One of those things one of the more popular workarounds is something called a milk club, which is essentially like an underground railroad for Listeria. When you put it that way, it's less of feeling there are like a bunch of organizations that get really into milk clubs. One of them, a person named Liz Ritesig, who is one of the big popularizers of milk clubs, who also was a supporter of the raw milk freedom writers. That's so good. I'm basically Rosa Parks. I want them to be able to kill kids. I'm essentially gondy. It's like staggering. Mother Jones described the raw milk freedom writers as quote, a caravan of self described frustrated mothers who wanted the repeal of federal raw milk laws. There's like the same framing where it's like, oh, these are just like concerned mothers. It's Mumsnet, but for diphtheria. As opposed to like people who are just like anti-science freaks. In addition to milk clubs, there's a workaround called herd shares. So the idea is you're not buying raw milk. You're paying to lease a cow in a dairy herd. And then the dairy delivers raw milk as a byproduct of the cow you fake. Oh, I love that. We're not buying it. We're like subscribed. That all brings us to our contemporary context. Nightmare. Interestingly, the current sort of landscape around raw milk laws is that frankly, a lot of blue states allow the sale of raw milk and a lot of red states ban it out right. Is it illegal in Oregon? You can buy raw milk, but only directly on the farm from a farmer with a herd of three cows or fewer. Oh, weird. Well, that's because of transmission of bovine tuberculosis. A smaller herd can't transmit it as much. Right. That there's a fewer opportunities for the disease spreading. Washington and California both have legal raw milk retail sale. You can go to the grocery store and buy raw milk in Washington and California. It's a gas station next to the cratome. I'm just going to go on a stop shop. It's so woo. Just like the sketchy things, aisle. You know, Erwan sells it in California. And of course they do. And it's 13 bucks. The funny thing is I think you could actually do a thing where you're like, look, you want raw milk. We don't want raw milk. Why don't we compromise? And we come up with some sort of process where like, we'll bring it up to a certain temperature, but like it won't be brought up to boiling. How about that as like a complex? And like you just don't know what past your situation is. And they're like, yeah, that sounds pretty reasonable. As long as you don't bring it up to boiling, it's like, yeah, actually, you know what? We can meet in the middle on this. You know, you treat it like it's a new discovery. We found a totally non-chemical way because it's like perfectly natural. Totally. And actually it dates back hundreds of years. So it's an ancestral way of keeping milk safe. That's good. You could use the like paleo bullshit language as a way to sell heating milk to kill germs. Just call it like a deliberate sunshine. Milk-sunting. We're basically sunning the milk. The milk has gotten red light there. Right. Just like the kind you put on your balls. The only like my only hopes for America now because everything is just like on fire. Is just like, let's just, how can we lie to these people to get the outcomes that we want? Because they're so dumb ultimately. In 2007, we were at a national high point of raw milk regulation. Just four states allowed for retail sale of raw milk in grocery stores. Save their names. Who was it? I don't remember which four states I didn't look into. Which ones in 2007? It does, by the way, it does seem like California has always been a state that doesn't ban it, which I'm like, fucking California man. When if it's too big to fail? In recent years, a number of states have repealed those bans and allowed for the sale of raw milk. Today, many coastal states allow retail sale of raw milk, California and Washington, a number of Western states, most of New England, all allow for retail sale of raw milk. Oh. So how in less than 20 years have we seen such a backlash to pasteurization and a rollback of those state bans? Right. The story of how we got here starts with the founding of the Weston A Price Foundation. I was gonna ask about this if they're gonna make a little cameo. Oh, it's not even a little cameo. It's like a protagonist. It not protagonist. And antagonist. Is that a drag name? Has someone? So Mike, what do you know about the Weston A Price Foundation? Well, I know of them from a previous show research. Yes. It's like the dumbest like woo-woo ant that you can possibly imagine, but also with like a ton of power. Woo-woo ant is such a great description of the vibes at Weston A Price. There's like a patina, there's like a hippie aesthetic to some of the things that they produce. So here is, I'm gonna send you their mission statement. Which I think I was gonna send you in the seat oil that was coming. I was like, oh, because I know I have it in my nose. I'll just do it from memory. The foundation is dedicated to restoring nutrient dense foods to the human diet through education, research, and activism. It supports a number of movements that contribute to this objective, including accurate nutrition instruction, organic and biodynamic farming, pasture feeding of livestock, community supported farms, honest and informative labeling, prepared parenting and nurturing therapies. Specific goals include establishment of universal access to clean, certified raw milk, and a bane on the use of soy formula for infants. Well, it goes really nuts at the end there. They're also leaving out of this mission statement, how much of their whole thing is about animal fats? And fat is actually good for you, and you should be eating meat fat and keto kind of elements. So that mission statement has a fair amount of curb appeal if you're not a partisan, or if you're a little left-leaning. Here's a little glimpse into the issues currently listed on their website. Say no to cell towers in your neighborhood. Oh, I love this, okay. Bird flu in raw milk are founder reveals the lies underlying the latest attack on raw milk. Oh, they're debunking you from an hour ago. Aubrey in shambles. Western Aprile's Foundation. Just kidding. Please add it. Yeah. Yeah. And they also have a section called main health topics. Here are some of their main health topics. Cod liver oil are number one superfood. Okay. Why butter is better? Nature's healthiest fat. Vaccinations. The most important decision parents will ever make. I wonder where they come down on that. I wonder what decision they think is best. And then the last one is just soy alert. Taxi-limation. What do they sound like? Some sort of like 1910s grandma. They're gonna give you a worthers and measles. The foundation is named for Weston A. Price. Do you know who Weston A. Price is? I did not. I looked this up when I forgot. He's a dentist from Cleveland who authored a book called Nutrition and Physical Degeneration that was published in 1939. Price traveled to more than a dozen countries to observe the health and diets of different societies. Ooh. His argument was that the dental and physical health of non-industrialized, excuse me, hit up. Is your fucking beans for breakfast? I only have beans to blame. They make me all that I am. His argument was that the health of non-industrialized communities was superior to the health of industrialized communities. Lathedly false, but okay. He said that the culprit for Americans' health was, was quote, foods of modern commerce. What we now call processed and ultra processed foods. Here is a synopsis of his conclusions from a piece in the Atlantic. I apologize for making you read something from the Atlantic. I hate you. I know. I know you do. It says, in the conclusion of Price's book, he suggests a common theme in the diet he observed across the world. The healthy primitives ate plenty of meat, seafood, and fats. Americans would be wise to adapt their own diets accordingly, price warrant. Shortly before publishing the book, he'd gone to the Rutland State Fair in Vermont and had sat for an hour observing the crowd. Three out of every four people he saw there, he said, showed signs of prenatal injury due to poor maternal nutrition. He's like eating a turkey leg at a fucking state fair. Just being like, that guy's fucked up, that guy's fucked up. Your mom fucked up. Do you like judging people on no information? That's absolutely what is it even me? Why included that part of us at a state fair? Allow me to introduce this part where he just sits at a state fair and goes, that guy's fucked up. Yeah, look at that over my, that's because your mom didn't eat enough butter. So of course, this is just like an aggressively racist way of talking about shit. He is also a dentist and not a physician, which is a different fucking thing. Although I will say, when I worked in human rights, I did a lot of work on developing countries and oftentimes you read nutritional reports. And in poor countries, people are often eating like 1900 calories of like white rice in a day because you can't afford protein, you can't afford fat. Like it's just not factually true that people in like poor Southeast Asia are eating tons of like meat and seafood in fats. Those are like rich people food. The book didn't make much of a splash when it was first published. I can't imagine why it would. Yeah. But it was influential with two people who mattered most and those are the co-founders of the Weston A. Price Foundation. One of them is a credentialed person. The other one is not. We're going to talk first about the credentialed person, Mary Enegg, had a master's and a doctorate in nutritional science. So she is credentialed, but her views are extremely fringe. She passed away in 2014. She was a big critic of vegetarianism. Oh, good. I love this. The vegetarian dunking always comes along with this weird animal fat thing. Among other things, Mary Enegg once argued that coconut oil could effectively treat HIV and AIDS. Oh, ho, ho, ho. The other co-founder is the one who is still with us. Sally Fallon Moral is her name. She is not the credentialed one. She has a bachelor's in English from Stanford and a master's in English from UCLA. And take it from a literary arts major from Brown University. Knock that shit off. You're not a nutrition guy. She co-authored a book called The Contagion Myth. Why viruses, including, quote unquote, coronavirus, are not the cause of disease. Our entire show is just leading up to this thing where all of these people just come out against the fucking germ theory of disease. Michael, you're not asking the questions that matter, which is if germs and viruses don't cause disease, what does, and the answer is 5G. Wait, is it literally? It is. Oh, my god. I thought she was going to do some, like, imbalance of humorous type shit. But this is very innovative. In the 90s, she read Westin A. Price's book and it really resonated with her. As a result, she started feeding her kids a high fat diet with lots of animal fats in it. She starts feeding her kids raw milk. She says her children don't have any health problems at all. And she credits that diet for things as, like, even for like her kids not needing braces. She's like, it's the animal fats. That's why. Or maybe she's decided not to give them braces. They're like, mom, totally. They're teeth are fucked. Oh, it's got a mean. It's good. One of the biggest priorities of the foundation is raw milk. They don't usually call it raw milk. They call it real milk. Westin A. Price Foundation spins off something called the campaign for real milk, which no joke to this day has a blog post called The Vendetta Against Altadena. Again, the whole real milk thing. It's like, what do you think pasteurization is? Real milk is only warm. What? And that's when it comes out of a cat. What doesn't get warm again later? They're like catastrophizing about like this extremely minor thing. This is a quote from the website of the campaign for real milk under the header raw milk safety. OK, it says real milk, milk that is pasture raised full fat and unprocessed, is an inherently safe food. That's because raw milk contains numerous bioactive components that kill pathogens in the milk, prevent pathogen absorption across the intestinal wall, and strengthen the immune system. No other food that we consume contains a built-in safety system, like the one in raw milk. Dude, this is like the most density of bullshit I think we've ever had. Would you like to know what their source for this is? It is one case study from 1984. It's like it's a sheer balls to say like not only is raw milk not bad for you, but it's actually super good for you. It's actually the only food that's this good for you. You're basically encouraging people to drink like a shit load of it. So in 2007, they also founded something called the Farm to Consumer Legal Defense Fund. And from what I can tell, this is the most effective arm in their raw milk work. OK. The fund provides legal support to farmers, presumably farmers aligned with their organizational values. Of course. The defense fund also set a goal, quote, to make raw milk sales legal in every state. They sort of put out the word that they're providing legal support and legal defense funds to farmers. In that process, they start elevating those dairy farmers in the press. And that is where we start to see a real uptick in more mainstream coverage of raw milk fights. When a raw milk dairy farmer is found to be in violation of a state or local ban, or when raw milk tests positive for really dangerous pathogens, they then kind of court media and push the story as like an injustice. Look at how our federal government is attacking these small farmers who are just doing things the way we've always done things. Don't pay attention to the mortality rates. And they frame it as like really devastating evidence of governmental overreach, right? So they're identifying raw milk farmers and then kind of pitching them to the media as like salt of the earth family farmers who are being trotten upon by government overreach. Yeah, like the legal attack doesn't necessarily make headlines in and of itself. Right. It makes more headlines to have people kind of wilding out. And we have a couple of people who have kind of wilded it out about raw milk. Right. And then sometime talking about two of their biggest rising stars of the raw milk world. I'm like a raw milk influencer. I'm like so popular. Oh, yeah. I'm like, then cool as. It's just like me puking in the toilet. One of those is someone named Mark McAfee who is from the San Joaquin Valley in California. In 2000, he co-founded what was then called Organic Pastures Dairy Company, which was renamed in 2022 raw form. You would say all caps. And now the logo is just two AR 15s. I mean, there's a lot of like distressed American flag graphics happening. Yeah, it's very much like aesthetic by Christian Odige. Right. McAfee found his farm in 2000 by 2007. His products were in 300 stores in California. Just fucking room temperature. I'll just on the shelf just festering. They do refrigerate. But then why do they refrigerate it? These people don't even believe in bacteria. Why are you refrigerating it? Have like bright green fucking mold floating on it? You fucking weirdos. McAfee also had a mail order business that he said brought in about $80,000 a month. Now you might be thinking, this is after the FDA ban. How on earth is he selling mail order raw milk across state lines? And that is he is labeling it as pet food not for human consumption. That's like those people that were selling like fish antibiotics on Amazon. Much like Altadena before them, raw farm USA has faced a lot of lawsuits and regulation. First up, that labeled as pet food thing didn't last very long. He was doing that in 2007, talking about it in the press in 2007. In 2008, they did face federal criminal charges for that. Oh, wow. God. 2023 federal prosecutors charged that raw farm USA had once again been shipping raw milk across state lines. So as a result, they're now in a consent decree. Oh, wow. Until 2028, the FDA can conduct audits and unannounced inspections. But as we know, the FDA, a shell of its former self, I see. Order raw milk in the fucking mail. It takes like a couple days in like the back of a van until it gets you. The farm has had many recalls. The most recent was in December for bird flu in their milk. Oh, my God. When McAfee was asked for comment on the bird flu recall, he gave comment to mother Jones. Here is how he responded to their request for comment on the bird flu recall. Trace the money he wrote in an email, in which he also denied bird flu could be a threat to his business or his customer's health. We don't think avian flu causes things to be unsafe. You may think I'm some kind of crazy person, but show me one person who's ever gotten sick from raw milk with avian flu. Viruses don't exist in raw milk. They die off quickly. Fearing viruses is ridiculous, he says. He holds that only people lacking strong microbiomes and good immune systems need worry. Of COVID, for instance, he says, I got it and it was mild. I'm a raw milk drinker. It didn't hardly phase me. I can't argue with science already. He got COVID and he drinks raw milk. Show me one person who got sick from COVID and it was mild. He's saying only people without good immune systems need to worry. That's a lot of fucking people, dude. He's the guy with the turkey leg of the state fair being like, your mom's, your mom drank too much wine. Pointing at people being like, feel like a whole big room. He's also very clear on his view of where the demand for raw milk is coming from. He told CBS News, quote, people are seeking raw milk like crazy. Anything that the FDA tells our customers to do, they do the opposite. Yep, that sounds about right. That sounds like we're dealing with the dumbest fucking people in the country who are also running it, by the way. To your point, McAfee is currently rumored to be in consideration for a role at HHS. Of course, KJ. That's always the fucking epilogue of these people now. The good news is that he does think Bird flu is, quote, a huge scam. Oh, good. That was backed by a pharma company's, quote, to create fear and produce a new vaccine after COVID closed up. Just say fucking birds aren't real. Get to the fucking point. Let's just, let's your fake dinosaurs. We all know this. God, why not? There's another sort of rising star named Amos Miller, who is an Amos raw milk dairy farmer in Pennsylvania. Okay. Pennsylvania allows for sale of raw milk. You just have to have a permit. And the core of the issue with Amos Miller is he's like, fuck your permit. I'm never getting the permit. So like, is legal to do what he is doing? He just decided to do it in the illegal way. Right. So the permit requires dairy farmers, raw dairy farmers, to regularly test their milk, their water, and their herd. It's pretty fucking reasonable. Permit holders can't, however, produce raw yogurt, kefir, or fresh cheese. I am guessing that that was the problem. He'd have to stop selling some of his products. It's also such garbage that you can just fucking sell this dangerous product with a permit. It feels like these people have all been coddled by like these weird carveouts for what? For what reason are we doing this? It's so weird. Pennsylvania's attorney general has also charged that Amos Miller has also been illegally shipping raw milk across state loans through what he calls a buyer's club. Okay. That has led to this kind of wild, protracted face-off between Miller and regulators. He and his attorney really seem to be like leaning into the controversy on a bunch of this. His attorney, while they had a court case in progress, wrote that Pennsylvania's Secretary of Agriculture thinks he's quote, the food Pope of the world. But he is kind of the food Pope of America. Pennsylvania? Yeah, absolutely. This guy thinks he's in charge of this issue. Yeah, that's how a government works. Amos Miller is extremely public about his alignment with the West and A Price Foundation. He publicly talks up the foundation. He cites them as kind of a cornerstone of his analysis and it's a flashpoint of his politicization around this issue. He has been a sponsor of their annual conference where, fun fact, the keynote speaker has been RFK Jr. Of course. I'm amazed it took us this long to get to him honestly. For all of those reasons and more, Amos Miller has made a great candidate for right wing stardom. Part of what happens is that these guys start going hard on raw milk publicly. West and A Price then boosts the media stories that there is. Right. And there's this sort of like symbiotic relationship of they keep grabbing headlines. And West and A Price keeps boosting them. Once we've got these couple of rogue dairy farmers in the headlines, those are now news stories that podcasters can pull up. Yeah, yeah, yeah. The YouTube reaction channels can start to react to. And it becomes a topic of conversation that otherwise wouldn't necessarily be a topic of conversation. Right? It then becomes a circular thing where like, right, then you get the stories where like, oh, the movement for raw milk is getting bigger. And then that then feeds into the next round of people who are like, oh, maybe I should be trying this. And then you get, yep, the next round of storytelling. Oh, there's a lot of raw milk people around. We have had a wave of raw milk endorsements from high profile people, many of whom are friends of the show. Paul Saladino has incurred feeding raw milk to infants. Yeah, great stuff. I mean, he also says that they should like eat raw livers and stuff. So at least he's consistent. Joe Rogan says he's a raw milk drinker. I watched a whole clip of him talking about it at length. And he switches pretty quickly from raw milk to whole milk as the language he is. So I think he doesn't know what we're talking like. I genuinely think he doesn't know. He's someone you could go on his show and be like, they need to heat up the milk, Joe. Yes. Easy. Easy. He also talks in the fucking clip. He's like, uh, you can pretty well tell when milk has gone bad. Like I just sniff it before I drink it. Yeah, that's not what you've been saying for not. And you're like, we're not talking about sour milk, Joe. You can't smell the stereo, Joe. It's not the same thing. It's oh my god. Again, these people don't believe in like microscopic things that can cause diseases. Turning point USA sold a shirt that said got raw milk on it, referencing a very timely got milk reference in 2025. First of all. And second of all, it did have an illustration of a bull on it. Because now we're at the place where it's like, do you, do you know where milk comes from? God damn it. Is that it? Do you believe in bacteria? It's like walk me through what you think milk is. It's when you squeeze almonds, Mike. Oh my god. Thomas Massey, that same Republican from Kentucky, has introduced a bill to overturn the FDA ban. And on interstate raw milk sales, Gupp herself says that she puts raw cream in her coffee each morning. And she says she gets it from Mark McAfee's farm. God, not that I expect any better from Quentin, but like Jesus Christ. She acknowledged to the cut that some of the claims around raw milk are quote unquote pseudo science. But she also said is someone going to invest in getting a data set around raw milk? Oh my god. Not going to be the dairy industry, right? And I'm like, why are you fucking kidding me? If the dairy industry was like, you can do less work, sell more products at a higher price point across the fucking country, do you not think Altadena would be jumping at the opportunity? And also you're paying for the raw milk. It's also a business. It's not like big business versus like small farmers. It's all big business. And also like, who's going to get the data set? We've had the data set since the fucking 1800s. Oh my god. This is like the thing. This is also like RFK Jr. being like, we're finally going to see whether vaccines work. On top of that, there has also been considerable uptick in pro raw milk discourse on gab and rumble and info wars. And a couple of info wars podcast hosts have talked about it. One of them, Owen Shroyer said in his podcast, the war room quote, they say bird flu and milk, bird flu and milk. Oh, it's the scariest thing. They'll just make raw milk illegal. That's what this is all about. And I'm like, them is Trump and RFK Jr. And even under Democrats, no one was reaching further than the FDA interstate commerce man. No one was saying it's totally illegal to sell raw milk in the United States of America. There's some things to think about in terms of like why raw milk has taken off now. After so many years of such successful regulation of it, there are a couple of things. One is that as in the turn of the 19th to 20th century, the dairy industry has been changing. In recent decades, more and more independent and family dairy farmers have disappeared. They've been bought out. They've been overtaken by large scale corporate dairy farms. And if small farmers are trying to compete with the margins of huge dairy farms, they can't. Right. So instead, they're going to look for ways to signify that their milk is different and better. This is part of the reason why some small dairies have started putting their milk in glass bottles because it looks like a heftier and more prestige kind of product. Oh, that's interesting. There are a number of dairy farmers that I read interviews with who are like, look, I don't believe that GMOs are any kind of issue, but we absolutely label our milk as being GMO free because people will pay more if there's a GMO free label on it. And I guess willing to pay more for milk, they think it's like fucking has so many vitamins or some shit. On top of that, in recent years, there has been more new research to misinterpret. The biggest example of this is that in the late 90s, there was a Swiss epidemiologist who started to look into something called the farm effect. It is this sort of sometimes observed, sometimes not effect where some kids raised on farms appeared to develop allergies and asthma much less than kids raised in other settings, right? So they published their first study on this in 1999 and they found that local kids who lived on farms did indeed appear to have lower rates of allergies. This is just in Switzerland, right? That's all we're talking about here. Studies since then have been considerably more mixed, but there's definitely enough evidence to keep looking. The farm effect appears to be most observed and in some cases, it might even be exclusively observed in Western European farms. So I'm like, oh, there's a lot of differences. Right. I don't know if that does anything to do with milk specifically. That's just like, that could be many different things. They start looking into farm milk. Essentially what they're talking about when they talk about farm milk is milk that is produced on the farm. But in that research, they didn't track whether the farm milk was raw or not. Because they might be just like pasteurizing it themselves. Right. Or they might be doing what lots and lots of farmers have been doing for hundreds of years and boiling or scalding the milk. Even though they have not been able to certify what portion of that is raw versus pasteurized versus boiled or scalded milk, raw milk folks have seized upon this and been like, aha, I knew it. It's the milk. Even for them, this is thin. It is really thin. Farms in other countries have kids who may or may not be drinking raw milk have fewer allergies. Gee. There's like five leaps you have to make to think that's evidence of anything. Your kids gonna get asthma. So as a result, don't let them get asthma. Instead, give them a list area. Kill him quicker. On top of the dairy industry stuff, on top of that new research, one of the big boosts that appears to have taken place with raw milk consumption is COVID lockdowns and the amount of anti-vax and anti-science sentiment that that kicked up. Mark McAfee has talked about what a boom in sales they experienced during and after 2020. Raw milk and sort of the rhetoric around raw milk, dovetails really nicely with a number of other right wing projects and conspiracies. So one of the biggest boosters of raw milk has been a number of tradwives, right? Which is like part of this project around cultural nostalgia and like a throwback to a time with much more misogyny. And also like everything else on TikTok, it's like mostly people faking it. I'm so sorry, you don't think Nora Smith woke up to a sick toddler and was like, I need to make cough drops from scratch. Right, the whole thing is just like, it's like those morning routine videos that we were talking about that are like completely faked. It's just that everyone is like faking the lifestyle that they're living. And this is just like one of the other fake lifestyles that you can pretend that you're doing. I will say some folks on the right go so far as to contend that derries are injecting chemicals into pasteurized milk. Sure. They call it quote, state approved milk. What? Fiat currency. That's just like everything you eat is state approved. There's like health inspections at restaurants on some level that state approved. I'm a rabble. I don't eat your state approved USDA inspected beef. Have fun getting poisoned. Have fun getting fucking hysteria. Genuinely, and like, I mean, I do think that is sort of the question that we're grappling with here is like, what are the risky decisions that we let people make? Right. We allow people to drink to excess. We allow people to smoke. We give them lots of warnings about it, but they're allowed to do it. We allow people to eat like steak tartar. You don't even like shit like that. But we also like don't let people use like a lot of controlled substances. We don't let you enroll your kid in school without vaccinating them for certain communicable diseases. In a lot of states, not everyone anymore, Jesus Christ. But then I also think raw milk is different because there isn't actually any like benefit to it. Right. There's not a use case. Yeah, the reported benefits are fake. Like people are lying. And then it just feels like it's in a category that's much closer to just like driving without a seat belt. Yeah, like it is and it isn't, right? Like it's a freedom issue, but you're like, sorry, you want the freedom to, I guess, drink things that make you sick. Right. And also, especially to give them to your kids, right? It's like, there's also victims of this who are not making a choice. And there's a reason why, like if you want to smoke when you're over 18, you're smart enough to decide that that's the risk reward for you. But like if kids are being given raw milk, those kids are not in charge of the decision. Right, that is the hardest stop for me. Right. Is like the fact that like so many people are getting raw milk under the misapprehension that it will prevent their kids from getting allergies. Right. And in the process, their kids are getting fucking diptheria. Right. And like old, timey ass diseases. Because that also is where like regulation would come in that you're basically making a trade off. Okay, regulating this does involve some like loss of freedom if you think about it purely philosophically. But also will save the lives of many children. I thought that I would give our final word today to a food scientist named John Lucy, who was quoted by USA Today, quote, a lot of people just don't trust science anymore. But I don't even think this is science. I think a lot of it is just common sense. This is not making milk into an ultra processed food. I know. This is just heating it to 160 degrees for 15 seconds. You fucking weirdos. It's so, it really is one of those things where I'm like, I feel like I'm living on another planet. The most amazing thing to me is that these people do not believe in bacteria, but they do believe that you can walk around a state fair and identify people with prenatal injuries. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair because you're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair. You're not going to be able to live in a state fair.