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Over the last decade, milk has become a bit controversial.

Some people say it's a necessary and nutritious food, vital for healthy bones,
but others say it can cause cancer and lead to an early death.
So, who's right?
And why are we drinking it anyway?
[Intro music]
Milk is the basis of every mammal's diet after birth,
when our digestive systems are immature and small.
Basically, it's power food to kick-start our bodies and help us grow.
Milk is rich in fat, vitamins, minerals, and milk-sugar: lactose.
On top of that, for a while after birth, it also contains antibodies and proteins
that protect us from infections and regulate our immune system.
But it's a lot of effort for mothers to produce.
Eventually, humans stop drinking mother's milk
and transition to the diet of their parents.
This is how it's been for thousands of years.
Until about eleven thousand years ago,
when our ancestors settled down in the first agricultural communities.
Soon, they domesticated the first dairy animals:
goats, sheep, and cattle.
They found that dairy animals are able to eat useless and abundant stuff
and turn it into nutritious and tasty food.
This made a huge difference in terms of survival,
especially in hard times.
So groups that had milk available had an evolutionary advantage.
And through natural selection,
it changed the genes of communities who consumed a lot of it.
This adaptation has to do with a specialized enzyme: lactase.
Babies have a lot of it in their system,
so they can break down the milk-sugar lactose and digest milk easily.
But the older we grow, the fewer lactase enzymes our body produces.
Worldwide, about 65% of the population do not have the enzyme after infancy,
which means they are not able to digest more than about 150 milliliters each day.
This lactose intolerance is not spread evenly around the world, though.
In some East Asian communities, for example, it's up to 90%.
In Northern Europe and North America, the rates are the lowest overall.
There are probably a few reasons for this uneven distribution.
The trait was first introduced by random mutation,
which happened independently of each other in a few populations.
The fact that farming replaced hunting and gathering more and more
created natural-selection pressure.
People who were able to digest lactose had more foods at hand,
which was an advantage.
The migration of dairy farmers to the north then spread it further, which probably
pushed back populations there that didn't have the trait.
Okay, but if milk has been a valuable part of our diet for thousands of years, why
is it so controversial?
There are a number of claims regarding the negative and positive health effects of
milk.
The negative ones cover a wide variety,
from brittle bones to cancer, and cardiovascular diseases to intolerance and
allergies.
So, how do they hold up?
Some older studies found a connection between milk and a high risk of breast,
colon, and prostate cancer
But meta analyses found no impact on your cancer risk.
On the contrary, the calcium in milk might even have a protective effect against
colon cancer.
Although this could be calcium in general, it's not clear milk plays a role in this
effect.
Only studies on prostate cancer showed an increased risk for people who consumed
more than one and a quarter liters of milk a day.
But again, the association is inconsistent and other studies don't find any
effects.
We discuss these studies in more detail in our sources document. All in all, the
research seems to show that if you drink between
100 to 250 milliliters of milk per day, cancer is not a concern.
Similarly, meta-analyses could not find any impact from milk or dairy products on
your risk of heart disease, stroke, or your total mortality.
Some studies even suggested that high blood pressure might be rarer in people who
eat a lot of dairy,
although the evidence is not strong enough to claim this with confidence.
The case gets more complicated though when we look at bones.
A number of studies found neither positive nor negative effects for adults.
What most people worry most about though are harmful amounts of pesticides,
antibiotics, or hormones.
There are hormones in milk, but only in very low concentrations.
For example to get the same amount of hormones as from the pill,
you'd need to drink about 5000 litres of milk,
and even if you did, most hormones would be destroyed by your digestive system
before they could affect you,
which is the reason why so much medication is coated to protect it from our
digestion.
For pesticides and antibiotics,
there are regulations in most parts of the world that only allow completely
harmless amounts.
Milk that surpasses these thresholds is not allowed to go on the shelf.
So there's nothing in particular to worry about.
Besides allergies and those suffering from lactose intolerances,
the best known negative effects of milk are probably acne and general discomfort
after drinking milk or eating dairy products,
and here the effects are very real.
For example, skimmed milk has been found to statistically increase the rate of acne
by 24%.
Allergies against milk products are especially prevalent among children, with one
in 18 kids in Germany suffering from them.
In general, these allergies tend to get better or disappear as they grow older
though.
Okay. Is milk healthy then?
Milk, no matter if it comes from mothers, cows, sheep, goats, or camels is a
nutrient-dense food.
It contains all necessary macronutrients and many micronutrients.
Especially in regions where people struggle to get enough calories,
milk can contribute to a healthy life and lower child mortality.
For those living in the developed world, in general
milk is not harmful if you are not allergic or intolerant to it.
Especially for children, it's a good way to get large amounts of calcium
and for vegetarians, it's a good source of vitamin b12 and B vitamins in general.
This does not mean there are not other alternatives with the same effect. You do
not need to drink milk to be healthy
Milk is also definitely not a substitute for water.
Milk is power food, and the additional calories from drinking a lot of it on a
regular basis can contribute to being overweight.
Especially flavored milk or chocolate milk is more comparable to beverages like
lemonade than a healthy snack, and there's another thing to consider.
Milk production has a significant impact on the global climate.
About 33 percent of cropland is used to feed grazing animals including dairy cattle
Even though the carbon footprint of dairy products has declined since 1990,
Dairy production is still responsible for 3 percent of all greenhouse gas
emissions,
even more than all airplanes combined.
Milk is a huge industry and sadly, most of its production in factory farms causes
incredible suffering.
Cows are impregnated over and over, separated from their young shortly after birth,
and slaughtered once their tortured bodies are not productive anymore.
We can't ignore that much of the milk we consume stems from an industry
that is basically torture and contributes to climate change.
What about plant-based milk?
In terms of protein levels and nutritional value, only soy milk can compare to cow
milk.
The others need to be artificially enriched to reach similar levels of vitamins and
calcium.
So they can be an alternative to milk.
And another option might be available soon.
Several startups have created non-animal milk
that is nutritionally identical to dairy milk,
for example, through fermentation by gene modified bacteria.
This lab-grown milk can even be turned into cheese,
something that plant based alternatives struggle with because they lack casein and
whey protein,
the key ingredients that give dairy its taste and structure.
The environmental impact is a different story though.
Many milk alternatives use significantly less energy, land and less water to
produce
so they have a much lower environmental impact than animal milk.
If you want to have the lowest possible negative impact on the planet, the best
choice is whatever milk alternative is regional.
As with almost any topic milk is complicated.
It's not harmful for the majority of the population and it's crucial for many
people around the world.
It's good, nutritious food, but also harmful to the planet and causes a lot of
suffering.

We need to decide as a society how we want to deal with these facts.


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[Outro music]

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