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delirious_owl , to til in TIL about "Swill milk" where cows were fed distillery waste causing cow teeth rot and disease. It was also adulterated with raw eggs, burn sugar, etc. Swill milk lead to over 8,000 infant's deaths
@delirious_owl@discuss.online avatar

Were they drunk AF?

Furbag ,

The cows? No, all the alcohol had been extracted from the macerated grains, which made it a waste product of the distillery, but the grain itself still had nutritional value so they fed it to cows. Cutting it with all that other crap they added to it led to the cows getting sick and their milk getting tainted.

LucidNightmare , to til in TIL about "Swill milk" where cows were fed distillery waste causing cow teeth rot and disease. It was also adulterated with raw eggs, burn sugar, etc. Swill milk lead to over 8,000 infant's deaths

Humans, man. We really are the worst plague this planet has ever seen.

roguetrick , (edited ) to til in TIL about "Swill milk" where cows were fed distillery waste causing cow teeth rot and disease. It was also adulterated with raw eggs, burn sugar, etc. Swill milk lead to over 8,000 infant's deaths

Pasteurization didn't even arrive in the US until the 1890s so even if these cows had unadulterated milk, it would still be killing massive amounts of infants by feeding it to them.

In a place like New York City, without adequate pasture and no refrigeration in the first place so nessicating literal factory farming, there was no way to market milk that wouldn't be lethal at the time.

It's frankly baffling that anybody was drinking raw milk at all at the time. Usually you'd process it into yogurt or cheese unless you directly lived on a farm or had a breastfeeding problem (which would likely result in the death of an infant). This was known since ancient times. It's why raw milk consumption was mostly associated with peasant farmers for a very long time.

I guess they saw a market of poor rural immigrants who had lived on a farm and decided to swindle them to death.

One thing to keep in mind with this time period and public health, of course is life was still cheap in cities. This is the age of King Cholera.

Edit: As an interesting aside, distiller's grains are nowadays more popular with beef cattle farmers. They're high in protein since they've been spent for making ethanol and so are better for producing muscle than milk. They've also been suggested as a good human supplement since it's got all the good stuff of grain without the sugar, so here comes bachelor chow. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distillers_grains

The reason they were raising cows in the city in the first place is the wet grain will spoil if you try to transport it too far from the distillery. They were trying to make a buck on trash.

Lesrid , to til in TIL about "Swill milk" where cows were fed distillery waste causing cow teeth rot and disease. It was also adulterated with raw eggs, burn sugar, etc. Swill milk lead to over 8,000 infant's deaths

So phisticated

Veedem , to til in TIL about "Swill milk" where cows were fed distillery waste causing cow teeth rot and disease. It was also adulterated with raw eggs, burn sugar, etc. Swill milk lead to over 8,000 infant's deaths
@Veedem@lemmy.world avatar

Libertarians will tell you that even this isn’t cause for government regulation and that the market will weed out the bad businesses by not buying their product.

That’s because the market is babies and they’d all be dead, Jim!

Plopp ,

No no, this was caused by regulation! Just simply too much regulation. Poor regulated cows. :(

imaqtpie , (edited ) to til in TIL about "Swill milk" where cows were fed distillery waste causing cow teeth rot and disease. It was also adulterated with raw eggs, burn sugar, etc. Swill milk lead to over 8,000 infant's deaths
@imaqtpie@sh.itjust.works avatar

My God. That is absolutely vile, on many different levels.

Successful_Try543 ,

This reminds me strongly on what has happened in China .

imaqtpie ,
@imaqtpie@sh.itjust.works avatar

Yeah I noticed that article too. Not quite as vile, to be fair. But any kind of milk contamination is still a nightmare scenario.

dragontamer , to technology in Launched on 25 March 1995, The WikiWikiWeb is the first wiki, or user-editable website.

Early wikis were wild.

“We” implemented forums by just repeatedly editing a page and leaving a --Username, and it was all on the honor system.

Kinda emulated like this --User2WouldReply

Yeah, like this --User3

Twoafros , to lemmyshitpost in Lloyds Bank coprolite is the largest palaeofaeces yet discovered

I thought the title said Lloyd Banks and was surprised that a member of G-Unit was into paleontology.

dezmd , to technology in Launched on 25 March 1995, The WikiWikiWeb is the first wiki, or user-editable website.
@dezmd@lemmy.world avatar

Ah yes, in the days of the Wiki Wiki Wild Wild Web.

eager_eagle , to technology in Launched on 25 March 1995, The WikiWikiWeb is the first wiki, or user-editable website.
@eager_eagle@lemmy.world avatar

Cunningham came up with the name WikiWikiWeb because he remembered a Honolulu International Airport counter employee who told him to take the Wiki Wiki Shuttle, a shuttle bus line that runs between the airport’s terminals. “Wiki Wiki” is a reduplication of “wiki”, a Hawaiian language word for “quick”.[7] Cunningham’s idea was to make WikiWikiWeb’s pages quickly editable by its users, so he initially thought about calling it “QuickWeb”, but later changed his mind and dubbed it “WikiWikiWeb”.

cool

eleitl , to technology in Launched on 25 March 1995, The WikiWikiWeb is the first wiki, or user-editable website.

Pepperidge farm remembers.

Track_Shovel , to lemmyshitpost in Lloyds Bank coprolite is the largest palaeofaeces yet discovered

Life goals

byroon , to lemmyshitpost in Lloyds Bank coprolite is the largest palaeofaeces yet discovered

Do construction crews get special training on what counts as important archeology?
“Hey foreman I found a massive shit while digging that trench we have to call the museum”
“Dave what the fuck are you talking about?”

JoShmoe , to lemmyshitpost in Lloyds Bank coprolite is the largest palaeofaeces yet discovered

Imagine digging for weeks to only find this.

MacNCheezus , to lemmyshitpost in Lloyds Bank coprolite is the largest palaeofaeces yet discovered
@MacNCheezus@lemmy.today avatar

Next time you feel like calling someone a piece of shit, call them paleofeces instead and see how long it takes for the ball to drop.

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