You're forgetting that your milk teeth start falling out by the time you're six, so even if breast milk was bad for your teeth you'd be starting over with a fresh set after you've been weaned.
Except that adult teeth are formed in the womb at 6 weeks. Even though it's rather grim, look at pictures of a child's skull. They have their baby teeth, and directly above are the adult teeth, hidden within the jaw bones. If modern people are developing crooked teeth which require braces, and ancient peoples didn't have that problem, then something modern is causing it. The consensus is that it's sugar.
Except that we have records of the bones. We can literally look at ancient people's skulls and teeth. If what you say is true, then we should find just as many skulls of ancient peoples with bad teeth as modern people, but we don't. Did all ancient people have perfect teeth? Of course not, but they had far healthier teeth than we do today. Even mainstream sources admit this. Here are some links:
You're experiencing gell-mann amnesia. These are the same people that lie constantly about everything they can. Ancient humans didn't have as many sugar-driven cavities as we do today but they did have severe issues like their teeth literally being ground down or shattered from lower quality food.
And remember, we don't have the skull of everyone everywhere to have ever lived. There's a huge selection bias here.
You're forgetting that your milk teeth start falling out by the time you're six, so even if breast milk was bad for your teeth you'd be starting over with a fresh set after you've been weaned.
Except that adult teeth are formed in the womb at 6 weeks. Even though it's rather grim, look at pictures of a child's skull. They have their baby teeth, and directly above are the adult teeth, hidden within the jaw bones. If modern people are developing crooked teeth which require braces, and ancient peoples didn't have that problem, then something modern is causing it. The consensus is that it's sugar.
Ancient people had fucked up teeth all the time. It's just that if you couldn't eat you died.
Except that we have records of the bones. We can literally look at ancient people's skulls and teeth. If what you say is true, then we should find just as many skulls of ancient peoples with bad teeth as modern people, but we don't. Did all ancient people have perfect teeth? Of course not, but they had far healthier teeth than we do today. Even mainstream sources admit this. Here are some links:
https://truththeory.com/scientists-reveal-ancient-romans-healthier-teeth-diets-low-one-substance/
https://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=167917
https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/prehistoric-humans-had-better-teeth-than-we-do-26567282/
https://stanfordpress.typepad.com/blog/2018/05/why-cavemen-needed-no-braces.html
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2013/02/24/172688806/ancient-chompers-were-healthier-than-ours
You're experiencing gell-mann amnesia. These are the same people that lie constantly about everything they can. Ancient humans didn't have as many sugar-driven cavities as we do today but they did have severe issues like their teeth literally being ground down or shattered from lower quality food.
And remember, we don't have the skull of everyone everywhere to have ever lived. There's a huge selection bias here.