THE STORY OF
ROYAL RAYMOND RIFE...continued
By
1920, Rife had finished building the world's first virus microscope. By
1933, he had perfected that technology and had constructed the incredibly
complex Universal Microscope, which had nearly 6,000 different parts
and was capable of magnifying objects 60,000 times their normal size. With
this incredible microscope, Rife became the first human being to actually
see a live virus, and until quite recently, the Universal Microscope was the
only one which was able view live viruses.
Modern electron microscopes
instantly kill everything beneath them, viewing only the mummified remains
and debris. What the Rife microscope can see is the bustling activity of
living viruses as they change form to accommodate changes in environment,
replicate rapidly in response to carcinogens, and transform normal cells
into tumour cells. But how was Rife able to accomplish this, in an age when
electronics and medicine were still just evolving? Here are a few technical
details to placate the sceptics...
Rife painstakingly identified
the individual spectroscopic signature of each microbe, using a slit
spectroscope attachment. Then, he slowly rotated block quartz prisms to
focus light of a single wavelength upon the micro organism he was examining.
This wavelength was selected because it resonated with the spectroscopic
signature frequency of the microbe based on the now-established fact that
every molecule oscillates at its own distinct frequency. The atoms that come
together to form a molecule are held together in that molecular
configuration with a covalent energy bond which both emits and absorbs its
own specific electromagnetic frequency. No two species of molecule have the
same electromagnetic oscillations or energetic signature. Resonance
amplifies light in the same way two ocean waves intensify each other when
they merge together.
The result of using a resonant
wavelength is that micro-organisms which are invisible in white light
suddenly become visible in a brilliant flash of light when they are exposed
to the colour frequency that resonates with their own distinct spectroscopic
signature. Rife was thus able to see these otherwise invisible organisms and
watch them actively invading tissues cultures. Rife's discovery enabled him
to view organisms that no one else could see with ordinary microscopes.
More than 75% of the organisms
Rife could see with his Universal Microscope are only visible with
ultra-violet light. But ultraviolet light is outside the range of human
vision, it is 'invisible' to us. Rife's brilliance allowed him to overcome
this limitation by heterodyning, a technique which became popular in early
radio broadcasting. He illuminated the microbe (usually a virus or bacteria)
with two different wavelengths of the same ultraviolet light frequency which
resonated with the spectral signature of the microbe. These two wavelengths
produced interference where they merged. This interference was, in effect, a
third, longer wave which fell into the visible portion of the
electromagnetic spectrum. This was how Rife made invisible microbes visible
without killing them, a feat which today's electron microscopes cannot
duplicate.
By this time, Rife was so far
ahead of his colleagues of the 1930's(!), that they could not comprehend
what he was doing without actually travelling to San Diego to Rife's
laboratory to look through his Virus Microscope for themselves. And many did
exactly that. One was Virginia Livingston. She eventually moved from New
Jersey to Rife's Point Loma (San Diego) neighbourhood and became a frequent
visitor to his lab. Virginia Livingston is now often given the credit for
identifying the organism which causes human cancer, beginning with research
papers she began publishing in 1948.
In reality, Royal Rife had
identified the human cancer virus first...in 1920! Rife then made over
20,000 unsuccessful attempts to transform normal cells into tumour cells. He
finally succeeded when he irradiated the cancer virus, passed it through a
cell-catching ultra-fine porcelain filter, and injected it into lab animals.
Not content to prove this virus would cause one tumour, Rife then created
400 tumours in succession from the same culture. He documented everything
with film, photographs, and meticulous records. He named the cancer virus
'Cryptocides primordiales.'

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