Re: MMS and Rife (plasma) technology
""That's just your opinion. It is an endorphin stimulator.
Nothing more, nothing less."
Royal Rife "deactivated" specific pathogens using his MOR (mortal
oscillatory rate) frequencies to compromise pleomorphic cells and destroy them
through tranmitted radio frequency energy, via a plasma EM wave.
"Endorphins" were never SO MUCH AS MENTIONED in any of Rife's
voluminous printed, published, filmed, or recorded works.
EVER.
It's official, Ladies and Gentlemen of Curezone.
WE HAVE A TROLL ! lol......."
No, endorphins were never mentioned in any of Rife's material because he,
like Hulda Clark, believes his own publicity. But that's what the Rife
generator (and Hulda's electrical zapper) stimulate. Endorphins are
created by the brain during aerobic exercise, meditation, or stimulation through
electrical impulses, sound waves, or light frequencies.
Just as in double blind studies of drugs it has been found that the human
spirit (not the mind) can cure as much as 60% of the time and it's called
the Placebo Effect. If you really believe something will cure you, it will
- if you want to be cured. (Many people don't want to be cured and don't
realize it because they are not in touch with themselves as spirit.)
A troll? Would I make a six week attempt at MMS getting up to 15 drops
twice a day just to be a troll?
http://www.healthwatcher.net/Quackerywatch/Cancer/Cancer-news/smh001230rife-a...
Cheating death
Sydney Morning Herald - December 30, 2000
Cancer sufferers have died after putting their faith in a device with electrical
parts worth just $15. Ben Hills reports.
<snip>
Although unanimously condemned as worthless by mainstream scientists and
banned in at least two American States, the highly profitable Rife industry is
flourishing in Australia because of a lack of effective regulation, says John
Dwyer, the head of medicine at Prince Henry and Prince of Wales teaching
hospitals in Sydney. He blames this on "buck-passing" among no fewer
than five government agencies supposedly responsible for protecting health
consumers (see "Nothing to do with us, say agencies") which have
failed to act against promoters of Rife machines and other "cures" he
regards as quackery.
The device was invented a century ago by Albert Abrams (1864-1924), an
American physician who became a millionaire and was branded by the American
Medical Association "the dean of gadget quacks". His theory was that
every medical condition was caused by an organism that had a specific frequency
- by building a machine to generate and beam that frequency back into the body
it would be destroyed, much as an opera singer can shatter a glass.
His research was refined by a Californian pathologist, Raymond Royal Rife
(1888-1971), and a New Mexico chiropractor, James Bare, who drew up tables
giving the frequency of 30,000 organisms they said caused every condition from
dandruff to leprosy, strokes and syphilis. AIDS, for instance, is said to be
cured by a frequency of 2,489 kilohertz in as little as three three-minute
sessions.
Electronics Australia magazine, which has been campaigning against the
gadgets, analysed one and found that it consisted of a nine-volt battery, some
wiring, a switch, a timer and two short lengths of copper tubing - components
worth about $15. The electrical current delivered was "almost
undetectable" and unlikely even to penetrate the skin, let alone kill any
organism.