The more one analyzes the government’s data about raw milk, the more suspect the data become.

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) obviously put a lot of time, thought, and energy into that 66-slide presentation that I and others assessed a few days ago. We found a number of holes in the presentation, such as mis-statements about the possibility of rabies being spread through raw milk.

Now Mary McGonigle-Martin has completed an even more in-depth assessment of the presentation (in her comment on yesterday’s post), and her results confirm the initial impressions several individuals had as to be nearly shocking. Not only are they inaccurate in describing the situation in California last September in which four children became ill, but they mix and match data so as to skew it toward their viewpoint (as in the use of illness from Mexican raw milk cheese).

It’s important to remember that these are supposedly skilled scientists accumulating and presenting this data–scientists whose salaries we are paying. It is becoming clear that these individuals are much less scientists than propagandists. As such, they are a disgrace to their profession.

Fortunately, their "data" are increasingly coming under public scrutiny, not only on this blog, but in more local media. One recent case is in North Carolina, where a journalist with an alternative paper challenged the blatherings of a local agriculture official in an excellent article. Among the highlights are that raw milk gets blamed on a kneejerk basis for stomach illnesses, that deli meats are a more worrisome source of listeria than raw milk, and that today’s raw milk isn’t the same for the most part as the raw milk that caused problems a century ago.

Most intriguing to me about this article is the refutation to the scientists’ argument that there is no data to suggest raw milk has nutritional benefits over pasteurized milk, via citation of recent studies. It’s the same kind of argument offered by the scientists about immunization. Isn’t the basis of the scientific approach maintaining an open mind?