go see below video............
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4lsvHMkWFg&feature=BFa&list=WLEE81C176FFDFEB28&lf=BFp
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4lsvHMkWFg&feature=BFa&list=WLEE81C176FFDFEB28&lf=BFp
read that Vitamin B17 is very effective in curing /preventing cancer.................
but banned in US or something.
LeMans2011 said:This blaspemous fella believes snake oil can cure everything modern medicine cannot
This blaspemous fella believes snake oil can cure everything modern medicine cannot
obviously there are a lot of fools here who never take basic biology in university level before. i had never heard of vitamin b17
There is no B17, it is just a name given to people who are not familiar with technical scientific jargon. It is easier for lay people to understand and grasp what is going on.
I guess people with EQ will kind of understand this.
This blaspemous fella believes snake oil can cure everything modern medicine cannot
you are really a joke, obviously you have no idea how the term b17 came about and making silly comments like this merely shows your level of understanding in science.
then why don't they use the term " bitter almonds extract/concentrate" ? real brainless
obviously there are a lot of fools here who never take basic biology in university level before. i had never heard of vitamin b17
By 1952, Dr. Ernst T. Krebs, Jr., a biochemist in San Francisco,
had advanced the theory that cancer, like scurvy and pellagra, is
not caused by some kind of mysterious bacterium, virus, or toxin,
but is merely a deficiency disease aggravated by the lack of an
essential food compound in modern-man's diet. He identified
this compound as part of the nitriloside family which occurs
abundantly in nature in over twelve-hundred edible plants and
found virtually in every part of the world. It is particularly
prevalent in the seeds of those fruits in the Prunus Rosacea family
(bitter almond, apricot, blackthorn, cherry, nectarine, peach, and
plum), but also contained in grasses, maize, sorghum, millet,
cassava, linseed, apple seeds, and many other foods that, generally,
have been deleted from the menus of modern civilization.
It is difficult to establish a clear-cut classification for a
nitriloside. Since it does not occur entirely by itself but rather is
found in foods, it probably should not be classified as a food. Like
sugar, it is a food component or a food factor. Nor can it be
classified as a drug inasmuch as it is a natural, non-toxic,
water-soluble substance entirely normal to and compatible with
human metabolism. The proper name for a food factor that
contains these properties is vitamin. Since this vitamin normally is
found with the B-complex, and since it was the seventeenth such
substance to be isolated within this complex, Dr. Krebs identified
it as vitamin B17.
He said:
Can the water-soluble non-toxic nitrilosides properly be
described as food? Probably not in the strict sense of the word. They
are certainly not drugs per se.... Since the nitrilosides are neither
food nor drug, they may be considered as accessory food factors.
Another term for water-soluble, non-toxic accessory food factors is
vitamin.(1)
There is no B17, it is just a name given to people who are not familiar with technical scientific jargon. It is easier for lay people to understand and grasp what is going on.
I guess people with EQ will kind of understand this.
you are really a joke, obviously you have no idea how the term b17 came about and making silly comments like this merely shows your level of understanding in science.
then why don't they use the term " bitter almonds extract/concentrate" ? real brainless
The chemical compound in question is vitamin B17, which is
found in those natural foods containing nitriloside. It is known
also as amygdalin and, as such, has been used and studied
extensively for well over a hundred years. But, in its concentrated
and purified form developed by Dr. Krebs specifically for cancer
therapy, it is known as Laetrile. For the sake of clarity in this
volume, however, we shall favor the more simple name: vitamin
B17
I have nothing against modern medicine. But the way pharmaceutical companies and "modern" hospitals market themselves is questionable. Many doctors, or specialists these days impress on others on their knowledge of high-technology equipment, scanners, etc. when sometimes a rub of of castor oil and some rest will suffice.
Cheers!
wanna guess what the doctor at SGH gave me for my very high blood pressure ?
panadol and vitamin B............................all for $99..................