A 1930′s Discovery to Cure Cancer- Rife Machines

10 years ago | Posted in: Technology, World | 14261 Views

A device developed in the 1930s may be the most successful cancer cure ever invented. Rife frequency therapy is an early, non-toxic cancer treatment that has fallen into obscurity — but one that deserves to be resurrected!

In 1933, an American inventor named Royal R. Rife invented an audio-frequency emitting device that was capable of sending frequencies into a person’s body that would destroy microorganisms found to be casually associated with cancer.

Though the theory may sound more like science fiction than real life, it’s supported by the repeated research of numerous highly respected scientists.

Unfortunately, like so many alternative cancer cures, Rife’s machines were discredited by industry elites, who regarded Rife’s work as pseudomedicine. As a result, Rife machines were never put into widespread use by mainstream medicine.

It is believed by many alternative health practitioners that the medical industry’s rejection of Rife’s machines was caused by a conspiracy involving the American Medical Association, the Department of Public Health, and other elements of “organized medicine.”

Pleomorphism: The Key to Rife’s Cancer Cure

Rife’s work is totally unlike any other work done in pursuit of a cure for cancer — before, during or after his lifetime. He believed that cancer was a kind of virus, and in order to pursue his theory, he invented a microscope that was 8 times more powerful than those used by his contemporaries.

Using his unique microscope, Rife discovered two organisms, which he named “BX” and “BY” and which appeared to cause carcinomas and sarcomas, respectively.

Further, he found that the organisms were pleomorphic — which means they could take different forms. In one form, the organisms were harmless, but in the other, they caused cancer.

The idea of pleomorphic entities comes from a French scientist, Antoine Beauchamp. In the early days of microbiology, Beauchamp and Louis Pasteur led opposing camps in the ideological war over the forms microbes could take. Pasteur’s ideas dominated, but scientists since have proven Beauchamp’s idea of pleomorphism to be correct, and the issue is still debated to this day. see more

source: undergroundhealthreporter.com

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