gibran2 wrote:Raw milk containing L. monocytogenes + pasteurization ---> safe product
Raw milk containing L. monocytogenes + NO pasteurization ---> unsafe, potentially fatal product
These two really are the question here, aren't they?
I'm sure it's clear that the first point I've quoted doesn't hold, since one of the four major outbreaks came from pasteurized milk.
I don't believe it's entirely clear whether the second point I've quote holds either.
My first quoted source, in the response to you, suggests that pasteurization doesn't help reduce milk-borne illnesses.
It also seems that your ignoring the negative impacts of pasteurization, like killing off the natural fauna living within milk. They actually act as a preservative, fighting off pathogens. It's the reason your pasteurized milk goes bad while raw milk undergoes a process, changing first into buttermilk, then into sour cream and finally into yoghurt.
PK Dick is to LSD as HP Lovecraft is to Mushrooms