I thought you can't eat mince rare because whilst all meat contains bacteria on the surface of the meat, it contains only very few inside but minced beef is mixed about and processed, so the bacteria on the outside makes contact with every part of the meats surface. This means that when you come to make a burger, bacteria is on the outside, on the inside and everywhere on that particular part of meat - I may be wrong, they were talking about it on some cooking show I was watching

I always eat pork medium to medium rare, I hate it when it's all overcooked and white, it needs a little pinkness to keep it's succulence

Yes, I saw a lot of rare chicken in Japan, I didn't really mind if it was a little rare, but proper rare really scared me, it just has a "wrong" texture and sliminess

I always though that the raw chicken was on a similar vein to the inside/outside, there's ecoli etc in the intestines of cows and chickens, and when butchering it's easier to avoid those areas and keep beef from cross contaminating with bacteria laden areas, but that's more difficult in a chicken, especially as chickens are mostly mass butchered and processed with the intention of them eventually being cooked, so they're not as careful about keeping the meat from being cross contaminated.
I may be totally wrong!
