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A MACHINE THAT KNEW TOO MUCH
by Chase Daniels and Steven Stiles

THE MOST UNUSUAL INSTRUMENTS THAT DR. ROYAL RIFE BUILT IN THE 1930S MYSTIFIED, CAPTIVATED & DEEPLY OFFENDED THE MEDICAL WORLD. THE UNIVERSAL MICROSCOPE WAS PURPORTEDLY ABLE TO VIEW LIVE DEADLY VIRUSES—CANCER INCLUDED! THE VIRUSES WERE THEN ZAPPED WITH HIS FREQUENCY-LADEN BEAM RAY MACHINE. TREATS! LOOKS BACK AT A SAGA OF HOPE AND HEALTH AND THE MAN WHO TRIED TO COVER IT ALL.

It looked like something Henry Ford and H.G. Wells might’ve dreamed up on the back of a napkin while tossing back a few down at the pub. It stood approximately three feet tall, wide and bulky like a Volkswagen Bug engine; the whole twisting contraption sprouted from a solid base of metal that resembled nothing more than a thick antique chess board. With tubular, shiny chrome arms and twisting scopes, a mirrored flurry of metal tentacles, spastic like a Jules Verne- inspired sea creature, it seemed a total lark. The remainder resembled more or less the guts of an Anheuser-Busch distillery; in all, the machine contained over a staggering 5,000 parts, give or take a few.

But the Universal Microscope or “Wonder Machine,” as those who first saw its affects referred to it, was built with much more in mind than a future Twilight Zone episode. It was, rather—and this is where things get interesting—a machine that could, possibly, corral the world’s most diabolical viruses—in minutes.

The 1930s were a fertile decade for industrial patents and technology-driven inventions. Throughout the world, inventors and their dreams flourished. Frank Whittle and Dr
extensive knowledge of light and optics from his studies at the University of Heidelberg, Germany, Rife’s microscope was something special, amazingly powerful and complex. 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 knobs 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.

To read the entire 10 page article—and find out what ever became of Rife and his machine – SUBSCRIBE!

Further important information:

A company is trying to incorporate frequency technology is Quiet-Mind Research Group Inc. (Q-MRG)/ MediTunes. Q-MRG/MediTunes has been working in the field of frequency technology for over the past 20 years determining its effect on human physiology. Q-MRG’s team is comprised of doctors, bio-medical chemical engineers and others, who have performed experiments using their frequency patterns and methodology in regards to stress, anxiety, depression, insomnia, and fatigue. In the midst of their study they proved, using the STAI (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory) that their technology could help aid stress and anxiety by having subjects listen to their patented frequencies. Q-MRG strives on helping people alleviate suffering as best they can by using a simple resonance physics approach that kills nothing but helps improve the overall quality of life. The company is about to launch its first products online under the brand MediTunes (www.meditunes.org) making it available to the public by means of membership to their site.

And Tinseltown may be calling, too. In the fight to eradicate cancer, President of Q-MRG/ MediTunes, Justin Bowman has written a screenplay called “The Wright Frequency,” which is currently in development.  Given the current economic devastation, rising health care costs and worldwide health problems this movie will help raise awareness about medical alternatives.

 

2 Responses to A MACHINE THAT KNEW TOO MUCH

  1. [...] A MACHINE THAT KNEW TOO MUCH | Treats! MagazineIn the fight to eradicate cancer, President of Q-MRG/ MediTunes, Justin Bowman has written a screenplay called “The Wright Frequency,” which is currently in … [...]

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