In an age when electronics were advancing rapidly, Rife constructed microscopes that achieved theoretically impossible optical magnifications and a device that he believed could destroy disease organisms by blasting them with electromagnetic frequencies specific to each type. The primary disease he focused on was cancer. His machine produces very low-energy electromagnetic waves similar to radio waves and passes them through the body. It is called a Rife frequency generator.
When scientists at Duke University put a virus under a special microscope, the video it produces is like watching a little bug in motion. In real-time, they can watch the “bug” ping around inside a cell as it hunts for its way into human cells.
Royal Raymond Rife, an inventor and optics engineer, built the first universal microscope in the early 1930s. He used it to find that each microbe, including bacteria, viruses and parasites, has its own unique resonance frequency pattern based on its genetic and chemical makeup. He also found that these organisms are particularly sensitive to their own frequencies and can be killed or disabled by increasing these frequencies until they explode, much like an intense musical note can shatter glass. He called this phenomenon “mortal oscillatory rate” or MOR.
Rife’s supporters claim that his devices can cure many medical conditions by finding the frequency of the disease and then using an impulse of the same frequency to kill or disable the organism. Unfortunately, no scientific research backs up these claims and most of the promoters of Rife machines have been convicted of health fraud.
Scientists are re-examining the links between some viruses and diseases, including cervical cancer and breast cancer, and even HIV. If mainstream researchers can get the Rife device operational and document it, perhaps we will one day see a beam ray in every home and Royal Raymond Rife will finally get the place in history that he so deserves.