05/25/2021
We do have some interesting articles to read! Not just the beautiful photos of girls! 🤓
This was in about a cure for cancer in 1931.
The 1930s were a fertile decade for industrial patents and technology-driven inventions. Throughout the world, inventors and their dreams flourished.
Rife’s microscope was something special, amazingly powerful and complex, the machine contained over a staggering 5,000 parts, give or take a few.
At the time light microscopes were limited by diffraction, a process by which a beam of light hits an obstacle and bends. This bend in the light wave affects the ability of the microscope to pull objects into focus, making it impossible to see living viruses. But, using a set of quartz prisms, his own patented light source, and other advanced materials, Rife created a microscope that eliminated nearly all light diffraction, allowing him to view live viruses in their natural form. According to Rife, if he could recognize living microbes using his technology, he could then employ the necessary techniques to kill them through intense frequency. That “employ,” was his Beam Ray Machine: A black, safe-deposit- looking contraption, radio-like, with nests of k***s and buttons, controlling 14,000 possible settings, light-socket powered with a 50 watt output tube (“X-ray tube”) filled with inert gas that powers intense frequency’s.
In essence, Rife’s Beam Ray Machine was designed to relentlessly bombard the identified virus with a light frequency, or vibratory rate that “devitalized” it while the surrounding healthy cells remained undamaged. Some in the know applauded. Others simply balked. Many dismissed it outright. But if Rife was right, this invention could potentially mean, while perhaps unbelievable, the end of disease.