Maybe part of it is a consequence of the risks of honey, which can actually spawn camp infants with botulism. But it seems that fear spread to everything.
Maybe part of it is a consequence of the risks of honey, which can actually spawn camp infants with botulism. But it seems that fear spread to everything.
The thing I'm a bit curious about is how the research on peanut allergies leading to the sort of uhhh... cynic's common sense take ("expose em early and they'll be fine") is something that we only got to in 2015. Various allergies are a decently big thing in many parts of the world, and it feels almost anticlimactic that the dumb guy take here just applied, and we didn't get to that.
Maybe someone has some more details about any basis for the original guidelines
I'm pretty sure it is.
The post that I am responding to does in fact deal in absolutes by asserting that "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger" is a natural law. Please don't troll by attributing that to me.
My more detailed take on this is here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45653240
It is in response to someone else who is dealing in absolutes. It seems pretty common, actually. Must be a lot of Sith around today.