ROYAL RAYMOND RIFE: DESTRUCTION THROUGH RESONANCE
Royal Raymond Rife (1888–1971) is considered one of the most technically brilliant minds in the history of frequency therapy. In the 1930s, he developed technologies in his San Diego laboratory that still have a loyal following in alternative medicine today. His approach was radical: healing through the targeted destruction of pathogens using precise frequencies.
The Universal Microscope: A Look at Living Organisms
Rife realized that conventional light microscopy had reached its physical limits. He designed highly complex optical microscopes that utilized prisms and monochromatic light.
- ✔ He claimed to be able to observe living microorganisms at magnifications of up to 17,000x.
- ✔ Unlike with electron microscopy, the pathogens remained alive during this process.
- ✔ Rife identified specific pathogens (such as the “BX virus”) and described pleomorphism — the ability of microorganisms to change form depending on their environment.
Das Prinzip der „Mortal Oscillatory Rate“ (MOR)
His therapeutic approach was based on mechanical resonance. He compared his method to a singer who causes a glass to shatter by singing at the exact pitch.
For each pathogen, he sought the specific frequency at which it began to vibrate and eventually disintegrated — he called this value the Mortal Oscillatory Rate (MOR).The “Beam Ray” device transmitted these frequencies wirelessly to the patient via a gas-filled plasma tube (Phanotron tube).
Technical Specifications: Rife Beam Ray
| Component | Feature |
|---|---|
| Carrier frequency | Approx. 3.3 MHz to 4 MHz |
| Modulation | Low-frequency audio signals (MOR) |
| Output medium | Helium or argon plasma tube |
| Primary objective | Selective resonance-based destruction of pathogens |
The 1934 Clinical Trial
In 1934, a committee at the University of Southern California conducted a study on 16 terminal cancer patients. According to reports, all patients were discharged as cured within a few months.
Despite these successes, Rife’s methods met with fierce resistance from the medical establishment. In the years that followed, his laboratories were destroyed and his technology was largely suppressed. Rife died in 1971, convinced that he had been the victim of a conspiracy between the pharmaceutical industry and the medical establishment.
Today, Rife's legacy forms the basis for modern plasma systems such as the Rifetech process.
