NickKreutz
FNG
My guess is that they did get botulism/other food borne diseases plenty of times. Just wasnt documented, or noone knew what it was or what caused it. "as far as we can tell, jimmy died from blood ghosts"
80's? hell I'm 36 and did the same thing...when I got sick of that just got a fat wad of Big League Chew in the pouch...spit strings for days.That jerky chew was the best. Everyone at t ball packing a fat dip and itching your balls like the major leaguers haha. It was fun growing up in the 80’s
the average lifespan was about 35... something was killing them. botulism, salmonella, trichinosis, probably all played significant rolls.People have always smoked meat to preserve, example the natives / indians in north america to create a jerky. Smoking can create anaerobic environment in the "danger zone" for bacteria. They did not have fancy ovens, temperature gauge , timers or nitrates. How did they not get botulism? What did they do differently?
Did they maybe smoke it until it was very dry, then add more heat to "kill off" any potential botulism that could have growed? The temps im seeing are 175f for 5 mins to denature the toxins the spores create.
Not to get off topic here but yes, malnourishment and disease directly attributable to it were a big part of infant mortality rates pre-20th centuryBut it wasnt from lack of Baby Formula.
Yes, many people have died of malnutrition in the past. The statement you made though was about baby formula. To a baby of less than 4-6 months, food is either milk or formula. There just isnt any other way around that. So yes, formula was hugely important to the reduction in infant starvation/mortality. Sorry if I sound antagonistic. I don’t mean to. Read this thread while rocking my infant to sleep, and I get a little grumpy when some say the formula thing is no big deal because we didn’t have it before.Prolly from just lack of food in general.
I remember my Grandfather talking about eating
nothing but cornmeal "mush" for weeks.
And anxiously awaiting Spring for the wild onions
to show up so they could add that to their cornmeal
for some flavor.
This is something of a numbers trick, high infant and post-natal mortality combined with the deaths of the more impetuous young men rocks that average pretty low. The people who managed to survive past 35 tended to live into their 60s and beyond pretty regularly.the average lifespan was about 35... something was killing them. botulism, salmonella, trichinosis, probably all played significant rolls.
And we certainly couldnt afford a "lactation consultant" LOL!!!
Whatever that is. And my wife, who spent the first 22 years of
her life in Cuba says formula did not exist there.
Just my personal experience.
I dont have anything against Formula, just didnt realize the
dependence.
I had not realized we had become, as a society, so frail and
dependent on baby formula.
I simply did not realize. I never had an ounce of it, and neither had my son,
my 4 cousins, nor my wife. Not to mention my parents or grandparents. Baby formula was just never a thing. The only
I have never "liked" a single thing on Rokslide but **** me, you came pretty close to making me do a first.If more people utilized their lactation consultant, which are free in all birth facilities and most pediatric clinics, it's practically a guarantee we would have WAY more mothers sticking with breast feeding and not be so reliant on the formula you seem to be so obsessed with.
We have a society where we have a new generation of mother's who can't produce milk, couples that can't create babies, and more new allergies and mental disorders than we can count. These aren't things our younger generations have chosen because they're soft; they're results of being poisoned by our "food" systems (corn, sugar, soy, pesticides, herbicides), pharmaceuticals, pollution, birth control, etc. Handed down from a generation that seems to have nothing better to do with their time but constantly complain about these new hurdles we've created for our population.
My 3rd baby is 3 weeks old today and he's downstairs eating from his mother right this moment. Luckily, none of my three kids have needed to have a sip of formula. Several people aren't so lucky. We had a baby pass away last year and my wife donated breast milk to another lady for 6 months afterwards. Despite trying literally everything, and to no fault of her own, that poor woman just could not produce milk. 200 years ago her baby would've died or would've required a community of willing mothers to help feed it. Ugly facts of nature. Thank God for baby formula for people in her heartbreaking position.
They also had an infant mortality rate 5-6 times greater than we have today.
Mortality in the past: every second child died
The chances that a newborn survives childhood have increased from 50% to 96% globally. How do we know about the mortality of children in the past? And what can we learn from it for our future?ourworldindata.org
With the way things are going I think it wise to stock up on salt, sugar, vinegar, citric acid and a pressure canner. All are vital for preserving foods. Make your own non perishable goods.
See ,now you got it . Next can you guys move on to "MENSTRUAL EQUITY " . Oregon has decided to put tampons in the "boys" restrooms according to the Menstrual Dignity Act. (Sorry about the massive derail "botulism to breast feeding to menstruation. I guess this all has something to due with the survival of our species )Ah, it just hit me. The Formula is needed for all the pregnant men
who cant lactate.
I mean, since I'm obsessed with formula.