As I said, there are 1200 edible plants which contain it, not just those apricot seeds and bitter almonds. And, apple seeds also contains it, and our ancestors wouldn't have thrown the apple core away.The B17-deficiency theory doesnt make any sense to me, as we naturally hardly ever (or never) ate apricot/peach kernels or bitter almonds.
If your theory was correct, our early ancestors, eating natural foods only, all had cancer.
Does that make any sense to you?
Actually, the deficiency theory of a lot of diseases is quite heretic to the medical industry. You say that people always tend to think that we lack something when sick, but it's usually first blamed on something external, only to find out it's a deficiency of something. The medical establishment is quite obverse to the idea of diseases being deficiencies of something.Why is that people always tend to think that we lack something when sick?
Maybe because it makes it so much easier to be healthy; just buy a supplement of that what is lacking. Health can be bought for a few $
Wishfull thinking, in my opinion.
Scurvy and Pellagra (among others) are good examples of deficiency diseases. The past is filled with diseases which turned out to be such diseases, why would that suddenly stop happening in the 21st century? I don't find it all that strange that our modern diseases are also deficiency diseases, because we get less and less good nutrients.