Milk is bad for humans

Are you including the hormones?
Growth hormones and antibiotics are not allowed in Canada for milk production. And, in any event, whatever there is mostly resides in the fat:

https://www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/food-health-science-science-everywhere/milk-hormones-and-cancer

...A comparison of “modern milk” with milk in Mongolia, where cows are traditionally milked only five months of the year, and only during early pregnancy, reveals that the Mongolian milk has a lower hormone content. North American skim milk, though, is an exception. It has as low a hormone content as Mongolian milk since estrogen resides in fat. Another disturbing facet of the dairy-cancer connection is that rats fed milk develop more tumours than those fed water. None of this of course proves that dairy products are a factor in cancer but further investigation is warranted. In any case, you don’t have to go to Mongolia for your low-hormone milk, you can just drink skim milk.
 
Growth hormones and antibiotics are not allowed in Canada for milk production. And, in any event, whatever there is mostly resides in the fat:

https://www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/food-health-science-science-everywhere/milk-hormones-and-cancer

...A comparison of “modern milk” with milk in Mongolia, where cows are traditionally milked only five months of the year, and only during early pregnancy, reveals that the Mongolian milk has a lower hormone content. North American skim milk, though, is an exception. It has as low a hormone content as Mongolian milk since estrogen resides in fat. Another disturbing facet of the dairy-cancer connection is that rats fed milk develop more tumours than those fed water. None of this of course proves that dairy products are a factor in cancer but further investigation is warranted. In any case, you don’t have to go to Mongolia for your low-hormone milk, you can just drink skim milk.
Don't Mongolians consume mostly horse milk
 
People all around the World are trying to get enough protein/cals they consume whatever is abundantly available at hand, doesn't mean it's good for them.

Base my nutrition on SCIENCE. I could care less whether Eskimos eat 10lbs blubber/day, and still manage to live a fairly long.
 
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