| * DISCLAIMER:
Rife Machine technology is purely experimental, and is not intended
to diagnose or cure any specific condition. We make absolutely no
claims of any cure for any disease. Individual results may vary.
Our Rife Frequency Generators have not been FDA or AMA approved.
FDA & AMA
regulations require the following disclaimer: "All information
on this site and ALL Instruments and items on this web site are provided
for educational, research, and informational purposes only and is
not intended to be construed as medical advice nor are we intending
to practice medicine or lead anyone away from a doctor.We
make absolutely no claims of any cure or for any disease. "
The following is a listing of known MORs
(mortal oscillatory rates) as compiled by Dr. Robert P. Stafford, M.D.
a physician who worked with an original Rife machine from 1957 to 1963.
They are believed to be the killing frequencies Royal Rife himself
discovered and verified with his microscope. (from http://www.alteredspace.com/rsc/riferev.htm)
Original Rife frequencies
Tetanus 120 (An acute, often fatal infectious disease caused by the
anaerobic, spore forming bacillus Clostridium tetani.)
Syphilis 660 (Caused by Treponema pallidum, a helical, tightly coiled,
motile spirochete, a helical to sinusoidal bacterium. Mechanisms of T.
pallidum pathogenesis are poorly understood. Existing diagnostic tests
for syphilus are sub-optimal, and no vaccine against T. pallidum is available.
The subspecies of T. pallidum cause syphilis, yaws, nonvenereal endemic
syphilis or pinta.)
Gonorrhoea 712 (A gram-negative bacteria, Neisseria gonorrhoea, causes
this sexual disease and primarily affects columnar epithelium in genital
mucosal surfaces of the urethra, accessory ducts and gland, as well as
endocervix. If contaminated fingers rub the eye then conjunctivitis can
result.)
Staphlococcus 728 (Genus of nonmotile gram-positive bacteria that are
found in clusters and that produce important exotoxins. Staphylococcus
aureus (Staphylococcus pyogenes) is pyogenic, an opportunistic pathogen
and responsible for a range of infections including severe sepsis, pneumonia,
endocarditis and soft tissue infections.)
Pneumococcus 776 (Gram-positive pyogenic organisms about 1m diameter,
usually encapsulated, closely related to streptococcus, associated with
diseases of the lung. Pneumococcus is an important cause of serious infections
in the first three months of life. These infections are unlikely to be
prevented by the currently available infant immunization strategies.
One potential approach to prevention of pneumococcal disease in early
infancy is immunization of pregnant women.)
Streptococcus 880 (A genus of bacteria that are gram-positive cocci,
often occurring in chains of varying length. Some pathogenic species
produce exotoxins. In man, streptococcal species are responsible for
numerous infections such as scarlet fever, tonsillitis, erysipelas (skin
infection), endocarditis, rheumatic fever, glomerulonephritis, impetigo,
pneumonia, meningitis, pharyngitis, lymphadenitis and wound infections.
Streptococcus pneumoniae is the main culprit in lobar-pneumonia and broncho-pneumonia.
Streptococcus pneumoniae has been known for more than 100 years as the
most important bacterial pathogen of the respiratory tract in adults
and children. In recent years, the pneumococcus has begun to exhibit
increasing resistance to antimicrobial agents.)
Typhoid Bacteria 712 (Typhoid is an infectious febrile illness usually
spread by contamination of food, milk or water supplies with bacteria
Salmonella typhi. This is not to be confused with Salmonella typhimurium
which is the cause of salmonella food poisoning.)
Typhoid Virus 1862
Bacillus Coli Rod Form 800 (Most probably Escherichia coli, the archetypal
bacterium for biochemists, used very extensively in experimental work.
A rod shaped gram-negative bacillus (0.5 x 3-5 m) abundant in the large
intestine (colon) of mammals at about .1% of the total. E. coli, along
with other species of bacteria, provide us with Vitamin K and B-complex
vitamins. But a rare strain of this bacteria, E. coli O157:H7, is responsible
for food poisoning which causes bleeding of the intestines which can
be fatal.)
Bacillus Coli Virus 1552
Tuberculosis Rod Form 803 (Tuberculosis, an infectious bacterial disease
caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is characterized by inflammatory
infiltrations, formation of tubercles (solid elevations of skin or mucous
membranes), tissue death, abscesses, formation of fibrous tissue, and
calcification of tissue. Infection is transmitted from infected people,
cows, or contaminated milk. Presently the worlds leading killer. It usually
occurs as pneumonia, but TB can also occur in the brain, back, knee,
lymph nodes, or other organs and bones.)
Tuberculosis Virus 1552
Sarcoma cancer (all forms) 2008 (A form of cancer that arises in the
supportive tissues such as bone, cartilage, fat or muscle.)
Carcinoma cancer (all forms) 2128 (A malignant new growth that arises
from epithelium, found in skin or, more commonly, the lining of body
organs, for example: breast, prostate, lung, stomach or bowel. Carcinomas
tend to infiltrate into adjacent tissue and spread (metastasize) to distant
organs, for example: to bone, liver, lung or the brain.)
Streptothrix 784 (A genus of bacilli occurring of the form of long,
smooth and apparently branched threads, either straight or twisted. Streptothrix
is a synonym for Actinomyces israelii. This species is a gram-positive,
cast-forming, non|acid-fast, non|spore-forming anaerobic bacillus that
is difficult to isolate and identify. Its filamentous growth and mycelialike
colonies have a striking resemblance to fungi. They are soil organisms.
It can cause the eye diseases Canaliculitis and Keratitis.)
Leprosy 783 (An infectious disease caused by Mycobacterium leprae (mycobacteria
are bacteria with unusual cell walls that are resistant to digestion,
being waxy, very hydrophobic and rich in lipid), an obligate intracellular
parasite that survives lysosomal enzyme attack by possessing a waxy coat.
Leprosy is a chronic disease associated with depressed cellular (but
not humoral) immunity. The bacterium requires a lower temperature than
37-C and thrives particularly in peripheral Schwann cells and macrophages.
Only humans and the nine banded armadillo are susceptible.)
Also, frequencies for polio, cholera, actinomycosis, glanders, bubonic
plague, anthrax, influenza, herpes, cataracts, glaucoma, colitis, sinus,
ulcers were discovered by Rife but we don't have any direct records from
him on these frequencies.
(Definitions in parentheses are mostly from the on-line medical dictionary
at http://cancerweb.ncl.ac.uk/omd/index.html and other medical web sites.)
Rife stated they had narrowed the actual distinct number of groups of
pathogenic bacteria to 10. In his 1953 book, Rife commented on this:
"We have classified the entire category of pathogenic bacteria into
10 individual groups. Any organism within its group can be readily changed
to any other organism within the ten groups depending upon the media with
which it is fed and grown. For example, with a pure culture of bacillus
coli, by altering the media as little as two parts per million by volume,
we can change that micro-organism in 36 hours to a bacillus typhosis showing
every known laboratory test even to the Widal reaction. Further controlled
alterations of the media will end up with the virus of poliomyelitis or
tuberculosis or cancer as desired, and then, if you please, alter the media
again and change the micro-organism back to bacillus coli."
Rife contended certain conclusions escaped earlier researchers simply
because they lacked the evidence of their eyes in seeing these forms
develop from a single entity: pleomorphism. They require a power of magnification
and resolution beyond the typical 2,000 power instrument.
Rife's work suggested that the wide array of disease bacterium were
merely differentiation phases in a life-cyle of an as of yet undetermined
entity. Researcher Gaston Naessens has verified many of Rife's findings,
and has delineated 16 phases of change of what Rife called the premodal
identity, which Naessens calls "somatids".
The Rife frequency instrument kills the "normal" carcinoma
cancer cell by rupturing the thousands of BX cancer viruses they contain
and thereby dumping the BX cancer virus contents into the cancer cell
cytoplasm. This BX cancer virus as Rife named it in 1931 is not a virus
by the normal standard usage of the term today. Rife based his definition
on the fact that the BX cancer virus could pass through the finest Berkefeld
porcelain filter of the time (000 filter). The BX cancer virus is ovoid
in shape, .066 microns along the major axis and .05 microns along the
minor axis. It is motile, driven by a proton transport flagella the same
as its bacterial parent, the E-coli bacteria. When the BX cancer virus
is ruptured it spills out its genome, ribosomes, RNA, enzymes, and various
proteins. When thousands of these ruptures occur all at once in a carcinoma
cancer cell the results are fatal to the cancer cell. A similar situation
occurs in the sarcoma cancer cell when the BY cancer viruses are all
disintegrated at once. The BY cancer virus is another form of the BX
cancer virus which Rife found caused sarcoma cancer after it had been
exposed to prolonged ultraviolet light exposure.
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