2007年9月25日星期二

This Man Figured Out How To Eliminate Cancer With Electronic Frequencies In The 1930s

Can A 1930s Cancer Cure Still Be Used Today?

Did The American Medical Association Bury This Technology?

You may have heard about the work Royal Raymond Rife did with frequency generators, but he made less familiar contributions to many other areas of science, as well. Rife's story has been lost in the decades since his work was published, and this article is to help shed some light on this important figure.

We go to San Diego, in 1915...

Royal Raymond Rife was a newly-minted college graduate when he met Henry Timken. The friendship of these two men has made our world a different place.

Royal Rife was bright-witted, young and had a keen understanding of many different types of engineering. Henry Timken was a businessman. He developed an empire in the ball-bearing industry, and Rife's engineering skills helped him out tremendously.

Why did Timken fund Rife's research?

Rife's background working with Carl Zeiss, the famous lens manufacturer, gave rise to Rife's unique vision in optical engineering. This optical expertise helped Rife develop an X-Ray eye that covered Timken's entire ball-bearing production line.

Rife's X-Ray eye monitored the precision quality Timken needed for his bearings, saving him billions of dollars. He gifted Rife with a lucrative research budget as thanks for his breakthrough.

Rife built a research lab in San Diego in the 1920's where he set out to find a causative agent for cancer. By the early 1930's Rife had built microscopes capable of viewing living viruses. He found that each species of virus pulsed with a specific frequency. Rife knew that it was possible to vibrate a microbe with 'coordinative resonance' until it is overpowered and dissolves. Through years of arduous research, Rife began to find disruptive frequencies for various viruses which he associated with cancer.

He called one of these viruses the 'BX virus,' which he correlated to carcinoma. The other virus, correlated to sarcoma, he called the 'BY virus'.

Rife sought frequencies which disrupted the growth of the virus, thus dissolving the tumor. He called these frequencies the 'Mortal Oscillatory Rate' or M.O.R. for short.

Rife's work has essentially vanished from the radar screen of the general public and the medical establishment. Why? Click here for part two (link here) of this report, to find out more about this overlooked hero.

(c) Copyright 2006 Joshua Parker All Rights Reserved Worldwide - you may republish with resource box and hyperlink