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RIFE
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Royal Raymond Rife (May 16, 1888 – August 5, 1971) claimed to have used a special optical microscope to observe very small viruses. Bacillus X and Bacillus Y (at some point renamed BX and BY viruses) were experimentally isolated, and Rife causally linked them to two forms of malignancy (cancer): carcinoma, and sarcoma. Rife also claimed to have rendered, in the living patient, such viruses
and many others inert by means of a "beam ray" device, which
was claimed to devitalize pathogens by inducing resonances in their
constituent chemicals
Imagine, for a moment, that you have spent more than two decades in
painfully laborious research-- that you have discovered an incredibly
simple, electronic approach to curing literally every disease on the
planet caused by viruses and bacteria . Indeed, it is a discovery that
would end the pain and suffering of countless millions and change life
on Earth forever. Certainly, the medical world would rush to embrace
you with every imaginable accolade and financial reward imaginable.
You would think so, wouldnt you? Unfortunately, arguably the greatest medical genius in all recorded
history suffered a fate literally the opposite of the foregoing logical
scenario. In fact, the history of medicine is replete with stories of
genius betrayed by backward thought and jealously, but most pathetically,
by greed and money.
So, you have just discovered a new therapy which can eradicate any
microbial disease but, so far, you and your amazing cure aren't very
popular.
What do you do next? Well, certainly the research foundations and teaching
institutions would welcome news of your astounding discovery. Won't
they be thrilled to learn you have a cure for the very same diseases
they are receiving hundreds of millions of dollars per year to investigate?
Maybe not, if it means the end of the gravy train. These people have
mortgages to pay and families to support. On second thought, forget
the research foundations. More than 75% of the organisms Rife could see with his Universal
Microscope are only visible with ultra-violet light. But ultraviolet
light is outside
the range of human vision, it is 'invisible' to us. Rife's brilliance
allowed him to overcome this limitation by heterodyning, a technique
which became popular in early radio broadcasting. He illuminated the
microbe (usually a virus or bacteria) with two different wavelengths
of the same ultraviolet light frequency which resonated with the spectral
signature of the microbe. These two wavelengths produced interference
where they merged. This interference was, in effect, a third, longer
wave which fell into the visible portion of the electromagnetic spectrum.
This was how Rife made invisible microbes visible without killing them,
a feat which today's electron microscopes cannot duplicate. Royal Rife had identified the human cancer virus first...in
1920! Rife then made over 20,000 unsuccessful attempts to transform
normal cells into tumor cells. He finally succeeded when he irradiated
the cancer virus, passed it through a cell-catching ultra-fine porcelain
filter, and injected it into lab animals. Not content to prove this
virus would cause one tumor, Rife then created 400 tumors in succession
from the same culture. He documented everything with film, photographs,
and meticulous records. He named the cancer virus 'Cryptocides primordiales.'
Rife seldom
got credit for his monumental discoveries. He was a quiet, unassuming
scientist, dedicated to expanding his discoveries rather than to ambition,
fame, and glory. His distaste for medical politics (which he could
afford
to ignore thanks to generous trusts set up by private benefactors)
left him at a disadvantage later, when powerful forces attacked him.
Coupled
with the influence of the pharmaceutical industry in purging his papers
from medical journals, it is hardly surprising that few have heard
of
Rife today. Many scientists and doctors have since confirmed Rife's
discovery of the cancer virus and its pleomorphic nature, using darkfield
techniques, the Naessens microscope, and laboratory experiments. Rife
also worked with the top scientists and doctors of his day who also
confirmed or endorsed various areas of his work. They included: E.C.
Rosenow, Sr. (longtime Chief of Bacteriology, Mayo Clinic); Arthur
Kendall
(Director, Northwestern Medical School); Dr. George Dock (internationally-renowned);
Alvin Foord (famous pathologist); Rufus Klein-Schmidt (President of
USC); R.T. Hamer (Superintendent, Paradise Valley Sanitarium; Dr. Milbank
Johnson (Director of the Southern California AMA); Whalen Morrison
(Chief
Surgeon, Santa Fe Railway); George Fischer (Childrens Hospital, N.Y.);
Edward Kopps (Metabolic Clinic, La Jolla); Karl Meyer (Hooper Foundation,
S.F.); M. Zite (Chicago University); and many others.
Castles made of sand dissolve in the sea eventually |
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