But look up the power of apricot kernels(AKA Vitamin B17, amygdalin, laetrile). I know it sounds like a bunch of conspiracy theorist hooplah, but I worked for the company that sells the most kernels and has the longest and best reputation in the industry and some of the testimony from the customers was ridiculously convincing.
This is a scam, and illegal in civilized countries where your drug has to actually cure cancer before you sell it as a cure for cancer.
There's nothing illegal about selling apricot kernels. Nowhere on the site says that it cures cancer, and when I was talking to customers I wasn't even allowed to say the word "cancer". And before you outright say that it doesn't cure cancer maybe you should do a little research on the subject first. Chemotherapy isn't all that effective, if you haven't noticed, and is incredibly harmful to the body in the process. It's just the preferred treatment because it's so ridiculously expensive that tons of people make ludicrous amounts of money on it.
Again: I read that site's description of a "zapper". They are not reputable and should not be used as a source. Period. It's pseudoscientific garbage; even if apricot kernels make you immortal and give you x-ray vision, you're going to have to find better means by which to back it up. So far, you've got a total crackpot website, testimonials from when you worked at a company who sells them, and the site of a company who also makes money selling them.
As far as chemotherapy is concerned: Do you seriously think there's such an implicit or explicit conspiracy going on that a useless therapy is used even though it wreaks both long and short term havoc on pretty much the entire human body? That's bullshit, and if they really wanted to just make something ineffective that is expensive and sells well, they wouldn't formulate it in such a way that hurts you so much.
Chemotherapy is used because, despite being kind of horrible, it's
some of the best treatment we have. Its efficacy depends on what sort of cancer you have, and isn't some sort of magical cure, but it is, in fact, useful.
Also, allow me to highlight this:
Nowhere on the site says that it cures cancer
The cancure link sure says it's an effective treatment!
As far as the site selling it is concerned: The only reason they don't make claims like that is because
doing so is illegal. I would bet money that, given the opportunity, they would proudly proclaim all sorts of things, just like with other fruit-medicine fads (mangosteen, acai, etc.).
If a company can't make specific claims about what its product does, there are often very good reasons for it.