>I've been drinking raw milk probably since I was 3 year old, like most kids in my relatively underdeveloped country before I moved to the US.
Why do you think this is a strong enough reason to allow a dangerous product that used to kill people onto the market? This anecdote isn't a strong empirical justification for the safety of raw milk, just like saying that you often don't crash your car isn't a good argument for the unnecessity of seatbelts. Food poisoning incidents are not that common, even in unsanitary conditions - pasteurisation is about making it so that kids don't get unlucky.
Why do you think this is a strong enough reason to allow a dangerous product that used to kill people onto the market? This anecdote isn't a strong empirical justification for the safety of raw milk, just like saying that you often don't crash your car isn't a good argument for the unnecessity of seatbelts. Food poisoning incidents are not that common, even in unsanitary conditions - pasteurisation is about making it so that kids don't get unlucky.