In my experience Internal stresses are not eliminated from acclimation time or kiln drying. I have about 2500bd feet of misc exotics that have been kiln dried and sitting in the same space for 3 years, the same town for near 7 years. I was resawing some 5/4" x 11" Santos Mahogany last night and it pinched so hard it stopped my 220V 25amp band saw in its tracks. I got a wedge in there fast, but had to use a hammer to get in in there.
The band saw has become my go to tool instead of my table saw. Internal stress in wood causing kickback, etc played a big part in that. The table saw is of course invaluable to me, but now my shop is based on the band saw. It's safer and can do 85 % of things I formally used the table saw for.
If anyone new is starting a shop I suggest making the band saw the center of operations instead of the table saw. If I could have only one tool it would be the band saw. It may only be my perception , but I notice woods now tend to have far more stress than when I was coming up. Maybe they grow the trees faster, dry it differently or it might be in my older age I am more paranoid(and have access to far more wood and species), but it seems once a week I get wood doing crazy stuff when I cut it.