>>11957133>Even non-ruminant animals avoid B12 deficiency with cobalt supplementation. No.
https://efsa.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.2903/j.efsa.2009.1383>Monogastric animals do not require Cobalt but they require vitamin B12. Consequently, there is no need for any cobalt supplementation to their feed. >It's fairly reasonable to expect the same in humans.No. The workings of the process have already been explained to you. In ruminants, bacteria produce B12 from cobalt in the foregut, which then goes to the abomasum (true stomatch) where it's absorbed. In Humans, the bacteria that do this are located in the colon, thus what they produce cannot be absorbed by the body.
Animal protein is the only reliable natural source of B12 for Humans.
>It is not a strawman. We have an extra ability to digest starches that isn't shated with apes, and our bodies just cannot process enough proten to allow getting enough glucose from meat.The article I linked explains how a vegan diet could not provide the amounts of proteins needed for our brains to develop, because of the quantities necessary and the feeding times needed to consume them. Thus any idea of veganism is primitive Humans is debunked. It does NOT mean starch wasn't also needed. It does NOT claim we are carnivores.
It claims we are omnivores.
Are you retarded that you cannot follow such simple arguments or are you just trolling? Hard to tell at this point.