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I think this is an old misunderstanding about homogenized milk. The fat chains aren't "shattered", the globules of fat are just dispersed into smaller droplets that become surrounded by casein so they don't reform.
This leads to faster and easier digestion because you have increased the surface area of the fats and the proteins from the solids. Now that doesn't mean the fats in unhomogenized milk arent digested, it just takes longer. If the fats from unhomogenized milk would "pass through without eventually being absorbed, then things like butter wouldn't be as bad for you as it is.
Again, this is a long debated but incorrect understanding of homogenized milk. Homogenization is a simple mechanical process that does not diminish the nutritional value of milk. What it does do is speed up the digestion of milk, which may be why you felt fuller for longer when drinking unhomogenized milk when you were younger. It's actually easier and quicker to digest, and the smaller fat particles actually make it easier for vitamin d to attach to it. The homogenization process also makes the proteins form softer curds in the stomach making it easier to digest.
Skim milk isn't created through the homogenization process, it's done through a separate process called centrifugal separation.
I spent some time on my uncle's dairy farm up in ohio. A lot of what you are talking about was a pretty common understanding from some of the old hands about homogenization when I was younger.