Chinese adults hire wet nurses to provide human breast milk on demand as 'Mother Nature's smoothie'
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(NaturalNews) The South China Morning Post is now reporting that adults in China are paying good money to breastfeed on wet nurses who are well paid for providing their milk. The wet nurses are paid around US$2,700 per month, and clients are offered the ability to consume the beverage directly. As in mammary consumption.
(Pause to let this sink in for a minute...)
A lot of people think this is ultra-creepy. And that was my first reaction, too. After all, the image of a 35-year-old adult man or woman feeding on the breasts of another woman somehow doesn't seem normal. Then again, in a culture where pop music celebrities parade around in slutty porn gear, nearly having sex on stage at music awards ceremonies as audiences applaud, I'm not sure anybody remembers what "normal" looks like anymore. Somehow, a 35-year-old business man feeding on the breasts of a well-paid wet nurse seems a lot less bizarre than the stage antics of Miley Cyrus, pop culture's newest deviant whose disturbing public perversions have set a new low for vulgarity.
It turns out, though, that there's more to this breastfeeding story than the mere shock factor. Some of these people who hire the wet nurses are chronically diseased and can't find sufficient nourishment in all the processed, contaminated foods that now characterize China. The Chinese people are starving for real nutrition and living in a country of unequalled chemical contamination. When real food is hard to come by, it just so happens that human breast milk is Mother Nature's smoothie. No one can deny that breast milk contains a miraculous assortment of immune-boosting, health-enhancing substances, many of which modern science can't even begin to understand but which every mom innately knows sustains and nourishes life.
When considered from this perspective -- in light of a malnourishment victim seeking the world's best source for human nutrition -- it suddenly seems acceptable... possibly even therapeutic.
It all depends on the intention of the person hiring the wet nurse, of course. If it's done for entertainment and novelty purposes, it's weird. If it's done as a desperate measure for lifesaving nutrition, it's commendable.
Most people, however, can't get past the shocking imagery of it. Dr. Tim Stanley of The Telegraph, for example, seems appalled at the idea that adult humans might drink human breast milk. "It's revolting," he says. "It's every bit as wrong as prostitution."
Yet I'm willing to bet Dr. Stanley drinks bovine breast milk (i.e. "milk"), a beverage that's far more bizarre because it's cross-species and nutritionally inferior to human breast milk. If you're going to drink Mother Nature's infant formula, it makes far more scientific sense to drink it from your own species and not get it from some hooved, furry creature that weighs four times as much as a human.
The only reason the consumption of human breast milk seems so bizarre to people like Dr. Stanley is because we've all gotten used to the far more revolting idea of sucking at the teat of an 800-pound cow. Of course, the dairy industry takes that milk and homogenizes it and pasteurizes it, turning the healthy beverage of raw cow's milk into a monstrosity of autoimmune disease, digestive disorders, acne and constipation. Pasteurization, it turns out, destroys the fragile lactase enzymes that allow humans to digest lactose. This is why so many people are wildly allergic to pasteurized cow's milk.