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Poster's Comments: Don't be confused - the info referred to about the

'so-called' dangers of raw milk is what the lobby for pasteurized milk wants us

to

believe. Besides, how sincere the concerns of the government for the health

of the average citizen/consumer in the present are well documented and known.

Below - Related Articles

 

Raw versus the law

 

 

_http://healthzone.ca/health/article/426851_

(http://healthzone.ca/health/article/426851)

Amid the idyllic peacefulness of a Grey-Bruce County farm, a milk battle is

brewing

May 17, 2008

 

_Megan Ogilvie_ (http://www.thestar.com/comment/columnists/94578)

HEALTH REPORTER

Michael Schmidt strides down the country lane, his black and white border

collie jogging ahead to sniff at clumps of dirt.

When the farmer reaches his back pasture, he calls to the dog in German and

Beppo streaks into the field to round up the 30-odd Canadienne cows grazing

the new spring grass. The sleek animals trot towards the fence. Their deep

brown flanks glisten in the afternoon sun.

" Ach, " says Schmidt. " Aren't they beautiful? "

These are the cows that are causing all the fuss. More specifically, it's

the milk that streams from the teats of these cows – thick, creamy, yellow

milk, sold unpasteurized in glass jars – that has the Ontario government and

two

public health units taking Schmidt to court.

It has launched a flurry of investigation into Schmidt's farming practices,

and officials have used surveillance cameras and a full-out raid on his farm

in 2006 to collect evidence. A mole was even sent to infiltrate the farmer's

inner circle.

Schmidt says he has never hidden the fact he has been distributing raw milk

from Glencolton Farms for more than 20 years.

People who clamour for his milk claim it provides myriad health benefits,

from reversing osteoporosis to curing allergies to fattening premature babies.

They say it tastes better than any milk bought at a corner store, and are

charmed their milk comes from well-cared-for animals that live on an idyllic,

organic farm in Grey-Bruce County near Owen Sound.

The problem is, Schmidt is breaking the law. And he knows it.

Milk in Canada must be pasteurized to ensure any dangerous pathogens in the

milk are eradicated. Experts say milk that has not been heat-treated can

carry hordes of potentially deadly bacteria, including salmonella, listeria,

campylobacter, brucella and E. coli 0157:H7, the same strain that killed seven

people in Walkerton in 2000.

Public health officials in Ontario say there is a real risk to drinking raw

milk, especially for young children, the elderly and those with compromised

immune systems. They point to a 2005 outbreak of E. coli 0157:H7 in Simcoe

County that was linked to the consumption of raw milk and sent four people,

including two children, to hospital with bloody diarrhea and severe abdominal

cramps.

" There is a well documented history of raw milk causing disease in

individuals and leading to outbreaks, " says Dr. Howard Shapiro, an associate

medical

officer of health at Toronto Public Health. " The risk is really well known and

quite dramatic. "

Yet, despite the rafts of warnings issued by everyone from Health Canada to

local health units to university food scientists, there are still those who

fervently believe the health benefits of raw milk outweigh any risk.

Proponents of raw milk say it contains beneficial bacteria and antibodies,

otherwise

killed by pasteurization, that boost the immune system. They claim

unpasteurized and unhomogenized milk is better digested, even by those who are

lactose

intolerant.

Schmidt says the underground milk market in Ontario is much larger than his

34-cow operation. He estimates as many as 300,000 people in the province

regularly drink unpasteurized milk from a network of secretive farmers.

" It's bigger than you can imagine, " he says.

The farmer is quick to point out he and his colleagues are no mavericks for

producing raw milk. It is legal to sell unpasteurized milk in half the U.S.

states and, according to Schmidt, in all European Union countries except

Scotland.

Since the 2006 raid on his farm, Schmidt has seen a groundswell of support

from raw milk proponents, a land owner association, celebrity chefs, some

Ontario MPPs – including former finance minister Greg Sorbara whose family

has

consumed his milk – and even renowned pianist Anton Kuerti.

Schmidt says he has flouted the law so people who want raw milk can have

their fix. He believes people should have the right to put whatever food they

want into their body.

The 54-year-old farmer was supposed to go to trial in Newmarket next week to

face 20 charges, under two different acts, laid by the Ministry of Natural

Resources and the Grey-Bruce Health Unit. The charges stem from his

production, storage and distribution of raw milk. If found guilty, Schmidt faces

fines

of up to $10,000 for every day the offence took place, which could bankrupt

him and shut down his milk operation.

At a pre-trial hearing yesterday, on consent of all parties, the trial date

was adjourned to the fall.

Schmidt has also been charged with contempt of court by the Regional

Municipality of York for failing to obey orders to stop distributing raw milk

in the

region. The court date for that trial is pending.

After hiring, then dismissing, the Toronto law firm of Ruby and Edwardh to

fight his case, Schmidt now plans to represent himself at both trials. He will

claim it is his right to distribute raw milk, that the current laws around

mandatory pasteurization are unconstitutional, and the government is

infringing on his personal freedom by preventing him from selling milk straight

from

the cow.

" I have deep respect for the freedom and rights of individuals, " he says

when asked why he is prepared to risk everything to defend raw milk. " That is

the foundation of a just society. "

When the trials begin later this year, they will likely pit the government,

its ministry officials and their best expert witnesses against a farmer with

a small dairy herd and a moral conviction. Cow's milk is now at the centre of

an all-out fight between personal freedom and the public good. And both

sides are convinced they are right.

Schmidt immigrated to Canada from Germany in 1983 with the dream of owning

an organic farm that would operate in harmony with the Earth. He bought 240

hectares in Grey-Bruce County and soon had rolling fields of grain and a

bustling barnyard filled with speckled, rare breed chickens, fat hogs and

pasture-fed cows.

Almost immediately people began to ask for farm-fresh milk and Schmidt was

happy to supply it. He was raised on raw milk in Germany and believed it

conferred health benefits not found in the industrial bagged milk sold in

stores.

" It is clear that the body rebels against pasteurized milk, " says Schmidt.

Things ticked happily along until 1994 when officials raided the farm and

charged him with selling raw milk. Schmidt hired a lawyer to help him fight the

charges, but at the end of the long struggle, which was peppered with

bizarre and sinister events – a cousin was kidnapped, he says, and two cows

murdered – he ended up pleading guilty and losing 200 hectares of the farm to

cover

legal costs.

After things settled, Schmidt and his farm had 12 years of peace. His raw

milk enterprise grew, and the farmer clawed out of debt by selling cartons of

eggs, homemade loaves of organic wheat bread and bacon and sausage from the

pigs.

But then, on a dreary November morning in 2006, ministry officials flooded

his farm. As Schmidt complied with their orders and answered their questions,

one of his employees videotaped the raid for their own evidence.

" We always kept the cameras with us because I knew, for 12 years I knew,

they would be back, " says Schmidt.

Footage shows ministry officials entering the dairy dressed in biohazard

suits. After eight hours, officials left with bottles of raw milk and all of

Schmidt's dairy, even his cheese-making equipment.

Schmidt later learned a team from the Ministry of Natural Resources had been

watching his farm for months. In fact, two officers went undercover as

regular citizens to gain access to his milk – and to get the evidence needed

to

lay the 20 charges now before the courts.

" It's so ridiculous ... they developed this huge plan about how they would

take us down. Well ... they got us. "

This time, Schmidt would not plead guilty. This time he would fight.

From the back of a ramshackle blue school bus, parked in a Thornhill church

lot, Ruth Abrahams doles out jars of raw milk. This is where Schmidt's loyal

customers come every Tuesday to pick up their milk and buy other groceries

from the farm. Sunshine warms the bus and soft strains of Debussy drift from

speakers wired to the ceiling.

Abrahams, who takes the TTC up from Toronto every week to volunteer, says

raw milk is the best type of food to put in your body.

" It just feels good to drink it, " she says. " I wouldn't touch the other

stuff. "

Today, the chat between customers is all about the upcoming trial. " It's

ridiculous, this whole thing, " says Abrahams. " It seems absurd to go to so much

trouble to prevent us from drinking milk. I just don't understand it. People

have not gotten sick. "

The people who line up for milk say they are not doing anything illegal. All

of them participate in Schmidt's cow-share program and have paid $300 to buy

a bit of one of his cows. The money they hand over for a jar of milk – it

costs $3 a litre – is simply the cost of boarding the cow at Glencolton

Farms.

To Schmidt, this loop-hole means he is not selling milk, rather he says he

is fairly distributing it to cow owners. The prohibition of raw milk does not

apply to farmers who are allowed to drink fresh milk from their cows. But

officials do not appreciate this subtlety.

The Regional Municipality of York's Health Services Department prohibited

Schmidt from distributing raw milk within its borders in December 2006. In May

2007, the region served Schmidt with an order from the Ontario Superior Court

prohibiting him from further contravening the 2006 order.

When Schmidt did not comply, officials tracked his activity in Thornhill in

January with the help of surveillance cameras. Ministry and public health

officials would not comment on either of the two cases while they are before

the

courts.

Kathryn Boor, a professor and department chair of food science at Cornell

University, says there is no solid scientific evidence that consuming raw milk

can cure health problems and ailments. But, she adds, that does not stop

people from believing that it can.

" A huge part of medicine is faith and believing that you're going to get

better. "

University of Guelph food scientist Art Hill says studies show

pasteurization does not diminish the nutritional qualities of milk.

" From the best data we have, I can't see any particular advantage to

drinking raw milk. "

And since raw milk can carry deadly pathogens, public health officials must

weigh the good of the many over the wishes of the few.

A 1998 study published in the American Journal of Public Health compared the

number of outbreaks attributed to raw milk in states where selling raw milk

is legal to states where it is prohibited. The authors found that between

1973 and 1992, 40 of the 46 outbreaks occurred in states where the sale of raw

milk is legal.

" The risks are tangible and measurable, " says Boor, who is considered an

international expert on dairy microbiology. " You can quantify the presence of

pathogens in raw milk. You can predict the exposure of humans to those

pathogens from consuming raw milk. The same is not true for the benefits.

" From a public health perspective, when you put these things on a balance,

it strictly goes one way. "

Back at the farm, Schmidt opens the door into the white-washed stone barn.

Swallows flit overhead and Leif, the farmer's broad-backed bull, snorts in his

stall.

" That's the big boy, " laughs Schmidt. " He's the boss of the whole barn. "

Cow-share owners often come to the farm to help with the chores and to see

first-hand where their frothy raw milk comes from. Schmidt says this is the

essence of his farming philosophy: to have a connection with the consumer,

respect for the animal, and affinity for the Earth. " You don't get rich, " he

says, " but you have a fair return for milk without pushing the cows into high

production. "

All of this – the cows, the farm, his way of life – is on the line, but

Schmidt believes his philosophy will prevail.

 

 

Toronto Star

 

Raw Milk - Healthy of hazardous?

Video. Ontario dairy farmer Michael Schmidt is fighting for the right to

sell unpasteurized milk, currently illegal in Canada. May 16, 2008

_http://www.thestar.com/fpLarge/video/426662_

(http://www.thestar.com/fpLarge/video/426662)

------------

 

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_http://www.realmilk.com/foodborne.html_

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Abstracts on the Effect of Pasteurization on the Nutritional Value of Milk

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the

bacteria in pasteurized milk is the bacteria of spoilage. And the overall

bacteria count of milk produced under clean conditions is much lower than that

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_http://www.realmilk.com/raw-milk-babies.html_

(http://www.realmilk.com/raw-milk-babies.html)

 

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_http://www.realmilk.com/enzyme.html_ (http://www.realmilk.com/enzyme.html)

 

 

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_http://www.realmilk.com/propaganda.html_

(http://www.realmilk.com/propaganda.html)

 

Raw Milk Vs. Pasteurized Milk

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_http://www.realmilk.com/rawvpasteur.html_

(http://www.realmilk.com/rawvpasteur.html)

 

 

Milk: Comparing Human, Cow, Goat & Infant Formula

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_http://www.saanendoah.com/compare.html_

(http://www.saanendoah.com/compare.html)

 

 

Info on Raw Milk & Pasteurization

_http://fiascofarm.com/dairy/rawmilk.htm_

(http://fiascofarm.com/dairy/rawmilk.htm)

 

Raw Milk

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_http://www.realmilk.com/raw.html_ (http://www.realmilk.com/raw.html)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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