Acharya Prashant explains that being a believer in the Vedas and God implies surrendering to the mechanisms of existence and living according to the wishes of nature rather than fabricating artificial ways. He points out that no other species drinks the milk of another species, and if humans truly needed milk at an older age, it would have been provided through their own mother's body. He argues that claiming a need for cow's milk is essentially suggesting that God made a mistake by only providing human breast milk for a short period. He asserts that nature's intelligence provides milk exactly as long as a baby needs it, and continuing to consume milk, ghee, or butter into adulthood is a deviation from the natural course. He characterizes the human craving for milk at an advanced age as a sign of being mentally infantile and suggests that the insistence on consuming milk beyond infancy is an ugly aberration and a departure from innate natural intelligence.