Royal Raymond Rife discovered that disease organisms, including the one occurring in cancer, can be devitalized or disintegrated by bombarding them with radio waves, tuned to a particular frequency, for each kind of organism.
Organisms from tuberculosis, cancer, sarcoma, the tumor resembling cancer, streptococcus infection, typhoid fever, staphylococcus infection, typhus, polio, spinal meningitis, herpes and two forms of leprosy were among many which the scientist reported are killed by the radio and audio waves.
Rife said that his laboratory experiments indicated that this method could also be used successfully and safely on organisms in living tissues. “We do not wish at this time,” Rife commented, ” to claim that we cured cancer, or any other disease, for that matter. But we can say that these waves have the power of devitalizing disease organisms, or ‘killing ‘ them, when tuned to an exact frequency, for each different organism. This applies to the organisms both in their free state and, in living tissues.”
In 1932, Rife made 20,000 attempts to isolate a virus causing cancer, and He finally found it, and called the purplish-red microbe the “BX Virus.”
Rife observed that when watching these organisms that have been bombarded by the beam ray under the microscope, he saw them become devitalized, sometimes in seconds, and no longer exhibit life. and reproduce.
in 1934, Rife inoculated over 400 rats with BX and then devitalized their tumors with the Beam Ray,
Rife, then enlisted 16 cancer patients at Scripps Ranch.
Every third day, each patient sat a few feet from the beam ray machine three minutes.
The cancer was “devitalized” and allowed the body to heal and rid itself of the toxins.
Within three months, 14 of the 16 cancer patients were cancer free, and the other 2 were clean within the next six weeks.
At his La Jolla clinic, one of the patients, Tom Knight, had a large tumor on his cheek.
Since the darkened lump was visible, it allowed the researchers to measure how the beam ray performed from start to finish. After treatment, Knight’s skin looked flawless.
In 1946, there was a patient at the clinic who looked like a “bag of bones.” Rife felt the man’s stomach. “It was just a cavity,” and “absolutely solid. And I thought to myself, well, nothing can be done for that.” After two months of treatment, the man recovered completely.
In 1937, Ben Cullen, Philip Hoyland, and others founded Beam Ray to manufacture the machine. Rife was not a partner. He approved the company only if it used his original principles and tested each unit thoroughly. By 1938, they had rented out 14 frequency instruments: 12 to American doctors, 2 to British.
Dr. Richard Hamer installed one at the Paradise Valley Sanitarium in National City. He ran “an average of 40 cases a day through his place,” writes Ben Cullen. “His case histories were absolutely wonderful.
One patient, an 82-year-old man, went home to Chicago and boasted about his miraculous improvement. It was said that Morris Fishbein, head of the American Medical Association, learned of the cure and wanted to buy into Beam Ray. Fishbein sent a lawyer, Aaron Shapiro, to wine and dine shareholders in San Diego.
“We wouldn’t do it,” writes Cullen. “The renown was spreading, and we weren’t even advertising.” When shareholders refused, Rife and his inventions went under assault from without and within.
The Beam Ray, if real, became an unthinkable threat to established medicine. (“Imagine a universal cure,” an observer writes, that “makes drugs obsolete.”) Pharmaceutical companies demanded more testing and blueprints of the device. The FDA withheld approval.
In 1939, six months after articles about Rife appeared in the Evening Tribune, the San Diego Medical Society banned use of all his instruments. “The most important question,” writes Daniel Haley, “is who caused the Medical Society to come down so hard on Rife’s doctors?
The device we have is very similar to the Rife Beam Ray Machine, but with updated technology. It is not FDA approved, and we cannot claim it cures anything, it is sold as electronic testing equipment. We are not doctors, and do not practice medicine.