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3 Reviews
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112 of 112 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Beam Ray device,
By A Customer
This review is from: Royal Rife's Beam Ray Device: Construction, Operation, and Effects on Selected Microorganisms [VHS] (VHS Tape)
I bought this video, along with Bare's book about how to build a beam ray device, supposedly like Rife's original device from the 30's. I was skeptical but actually ended up building the device. The first part of the video is fascinating. You are looking through a dark field microscope (which I wouldn't know from a telescope) at various micro-organisms being affected by the beam ray device. Mr. Bare gives a running commentary while the micro-organism are destroyed, each in a matter of minutes on your TV screen. If you are like me, it will be a really eerie experience to watch this "death to microbes" demonstration. My thoughts were along the lines of "If this thing was invented in the 30's and it can really do what I'm seeing on the screen, what happened? The most revolutionary medical device of the century, invented 70 years ago and I've never heard of it?"I would suggest reading the book, "The Cancer Cure That Worked" by Barry Lynnes, before you watch the video, so that you have some idea of the background. Briefly, a scientist named Royal Rife invented a microscope in the 20's that allowed him to see the world of the very small with magnification up to 8000X. A normal light microscope only goes to 1500X, allowing one to see bacteria, but nothing smaller. Rife's microscope allowed him to see viruses and a whole world while it was alive, unknown before that time and since. The modern electron microscope kills everything that it looks at, thus obviating much of the micro biological observations. With the microscope, Rife claimed to discover the virus that causes cancer. This lead him to his beam ray device, which was tested by him and 20 other doctors, under the auspices of USC, in 1934. Supposedly it was 100% effective at curing cancer, and was hailed across the country as the medical breakthrough of the 20th century, with doctors from the Mayo clinic, Northwestern University, and Stanford getting on the band wagon. Many years of lawsuits followed between the AMA and Rife's company ending with him a broken man and the microscope and beam ray device fading into obscurity. It's a great story. When you watch these microbes being destroyed, you'll get the idea that this thing may actually work. If you have any vision at all, your skin will tingle. Mine sure did, and resulted in me building the device as Bare lays out in the second half of the video and in his book. The construction is well described and shown, but it is not an easy project for the unskilled. I am an electronics engineer, so it was easy for me. The devices can be bought completely assembled now, unlike 6 years ago when the video came out. Enjoy
5.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent video!,
By Cindy Charlebois (Normal, IL United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Royal Rife's Beam Ray Device: Construction, Operation, and Effects on Selected Microorganisms [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Really amazing stuff on this video. Thank you, John Bare!!! When I was researching the Royal Raymond Rife story, this is the first video I purchased. It was fascinating and I continued the research. It's been several (10+?) years now since I watched the video, but I remember it was around 2 hours long. The first hour was spent viewing pathogens (bacteria, etc.) under a microscope and watching what happened to them when the appropriate frequencies were applied. The 2nd hour was how to make a rife-type device yourself! It is a terrific video to augment any Rife research study.
2 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
of historical interest only,
By ALH84001 (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Royal Rife's Beam Ray Device: Construction, Operation, and Effects on Selected Microorganisms [VHS] (VHS Tape)
Lets think critically. Royal Rife's disease theories are in the dustbin of history because they can't be independently verified, except by salesmen after your wallet. There are a zillion ways to kill pathogens while they are sitting on a microscope slide... but does this mean they all work in a living body? For example, Lysol kills the HIV virus. No one argues with that. But could a person drink it in sufficient quantity to cure AIDS? You'd be poisoned. No doubt Rife killed viruses in a laboratory environment. But extrapolating those results into the living body gets us back to the Lysol analogy - you'd fry yourself dead if you turned up the power high enough to "zap" parasites, buggies, etc. by any Hulda Clark or Royal Rife methodology. This is the fallacy of Radionics, a pseudoscience started in the early 20th century by Albert Abrams, who is currently burning in hell for fleecing thousands with bogus devices.
Sadly, there are still people picking up the song-flute and playing Abrams' tune all the way to the bank. Hulda Clark is the premier example. |
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Royal Rife's Beam Ray Device: Construction, Operation, and Effects on Selected Microorganisms [VHS] by James E. Bare (VHS Tape - 1996)
Out of stock
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