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  1. the farmers in our country need to be reigned in they moan about everything when they just cost us million possibly billions to sort out there shit cause they don’t even follow their own stock rules. And they all fucken vote for those national mongrels who only care about money and power not the people.

  2. Dairy needs to die.

    Humans drinking milk is fine if they are less than a few months old and the milk is human milk from mothers.

    Even cows won’t drink milk but calves do and the milk for calves is toxic to humans.

    Yes you may drink the stuff and seem to get away with it but it is not good for you and your immune system.

    Milk does not build healthy bones as the myth suggest but what it does do is help extract calcium from your bones, Populations with dairy consumption have osteoporosis and the higher the dairy consumption the higher the incidence of that bone weakening condition.

    Dairy PR has invaded health information in schools and contrary to public belief our health system suffers because of this blatant misinformation for profit.

    Who makes the profit. Farmers can struggle but bankers, fertiliser companies, irritation companies, meat processors and their service industries, do very well and send profits overseas to their owners.

    Dairy must die.

    Its killing New Zealand.

    1. Interesting, John W. My old Ma who died aged 104 said the same thing about adults drinking milk, and I never really listened. A dietitian relative now says exactly the same thing. The medical profession has little formal nutrition education, but they are now referring patients- oops clients – oops customers – to dietitians, with more people now having various food intolerances, irritable bowel syndrome and so on.

      Dairying will die out, and I think that most NZ’ers now know the environmental havoc that dairying has caused, particularly on our water ways, and no amount of advertising money is likely to convince us otherwise when our childhood rivers are putrid, or totally vanished.

      1. The beauty and theory behind trade that if you have enough of a network of economic units distributed over a wide enough area, then hopefully if a disaster happens in one area then there should always be another area that’s able to maintain trade and commerce. It’s not so much a technological problem / solution as much as a cultural solution. So people who identify merchants as friendly and trust worthy often do so because the place travelers come from are overwhelmingly prosperous and civil and fair and all those good things.

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